Effect of elevate temperature on properties of self- compacting concrete containing steel fibers, glass fibre and polypropylene fibers

Authors

  • Gokulnath Venkadachalam Assistant Professor, Department of Civil Engineering, Saveetha School of Engineering, Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences, Chennai-602105 Author
  • Vivek Gupta U.G Student, Department of Civil Engineering, Saveetha School of Engineering, Saveetha Institute of Medical and Technical Sciences, Chennai-602105 Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61841/xhmtx452

Keywords:

Steel fibre, Glass fibre, Polypropylene Fibre, Self-compacted concrete, High temperature, Strength properties, Super plasticizer

Abstract

In this paper, an endeavour has been made to consider the utilization of glass fibre, steel fibre, and polypropylene fibre on the properties of self-compacting concrete (SCC), for example, compressive quality mass misfortune when presented to raised temperatures. The impact of glass fiber, steel fiber, and polypropylene fibre as fractional substitutions of concrete, added fibre (steel fibre, glass fibre, and polypropylene) content 1.2% for a mixture of concrete material, and utilizing M sand on the properties of SCC are researched. In a solid blend, three kinds of M20, M25, and M30 evaluations of cement were utilized. The examples of each solid blend were warmed up to various temperatures (room temperature, 100°C, 200°C). In every example of testing utilized on three kinds of temperature, the temperature was held steady at the greatest incentive for 0 hours, 60 minutes, or 2 hours before cooling. Utilizing Ordinary Portland concrete, an expansion of around 20–23% in compressive quality. was seen at 28 days when polypropylene content was diminished from 20% to 30% Also, test results obviously show that there is little improvement in compressive quality inside the temperature range of 100°C–200°C. Testing of Steel fibre on temperature 100°C, 200°C, has expanded compressive quality contrasted with the ordinary steel fibre concrete. 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

1. Dr. Mucteba Uysal, Dr. Kemalettin Yilmaz, and Dr. Metin Ipe, “Properties and behavior of selfcompacting concrete produced with GBFS and FA additives subjected to high temperatures." M. Uysal et al. / Construction and Building Materials 28 (2012) 321–326.

2. Dr. Neelam Pathak, Dr. Rafat Siddique “Effects of elevated temperatures on properties of selfcompacting-concrete containing fly ash and spent foundry sand” N. Pathak, R. Siddique / Construction and Building Materials 34 (2012) 512–521.

3. Dr. R. Kacianauskas, Dr. I. G. Raftoyiannis, and Dr. J. Wang, "Properties of Concrete at Elevated Temperatures." Hindawi Publishing Corporation ISRN Civil Engineering Volume 2014, Article ID 468510, 15 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2014/468510

4. Dr. B. Sandhya Rani, Dr. N. Priyanka, Self-Compacting Concrete Using Polypropylene Fibers,” Volume 4, Issue 1, 2017, PP 16-19, ISSN 2349-4751 (Print) & ISSN 2349-476X (Online).

5. Dr. Alok A. Deshpande, Dr. Dhanendra Kumar, and Dr. Ravi Ranade ” Temperature effects on the bond behavior between deformed steel reinforcing bars and hybrid fiber-reinforced strainhardening cementitious composite." A.A. Deshpande et al., Construction and Building Materials 233 (2020) 117337.

6. Dr. Hernán Xargay, Dr. Paula Folino, Dr. Luciano Sambataro, and Dr. Guillermo Etse, "Temperature effects on failure behavior of self-compacting high-strength plain and fiber-reinforced concrete,” H. Xargay et al., Construction and Building Materials 165 (2018) 723–734.

7. Dr. Gonzalo Ruano, Dr. Facundo Isla, Dr. Bibiana Luccioni , Dr. Raúl Zerbino and Dr. Graciela Giaccio ” Steel fibers pull-out after exposure to high temperatures and its contribution to the residual mechanical behavior of high-strength concrete." G. Ruano et al. / Construction and

Building Materials 163 (2018) 571–585.

8. Dr. José D. Ríos, Dr. Héctor Cifuentes, Ph.D.; Dr. Carlos Leiva, Ph.D.; Dr. Celia García, Ph.D.; and María D. Alba, Ph.D. 5.” Behavior of High-Strength Polypropylene Fiber-Reinforced

9. Self-Compacting Concrete Exposed to High Temperatures” J. Mater. Civ. Eng., 2018, 30(11):04018271.

10. Dr. J Novák and Dr. A Kohoutková ” Fibre-reinforced concrete exposed to elevated temperature” IOP Conf. Series: Materials Science and Engineering 246 (2017) 012045 doi:10.1088/1757-899X/246/1/012045.

11. Dr. Najilah Farouk, Dr. I. Padmanaban, “Experimental Study on Polypropylene Fiber Reinforced Self

12. Compacting Concrete,” Vol. 10, No. 14, pp. 345–352, 2017.

Downloads

Published

30.04.2020

How to Cite

Venkadachalam, G., & Gupta, V. (2020). Effect of elevate temperature on properties of self- compacting concrete containing steel fibers, glass fibre and polypropylene fibers. International Journal of Psychosocial Rehabilitation, 24(2), 4529-4537. https://doi.org/10.61841/xhmtx452