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Abstract
The study of fibre-reinforced concrete (FRC) has become of increasing interest in the last decades. Although it is not a new technology, it has experienced a remarkable progress with the appearance of some recommendations in the standards. More specifically, the use of polyolefin fibres has proved to increase the tensile strength of concrete without the problems usually found with steel fibres, especially those related to corrosion. This type of fibres have been studied in depth and its fracture behaviour has been successfully simulated in the past by means of an embedded crack model using a trilinear softening function. Nevertheless, these simulations have been always focused on cases where fracture took place under pure mode I conditions, namely using the classical three-point bending test on notched specimens. In this study, such embedded crack model is used to reproduce the fracture behaviour on notched specimens subjected to a modified three-point bending test that induces fracture under a combination of modes I and II. Three PFRC mixes are analysed, all of them with the same proportions of concrete components but different proportions of polyolefin fibres. The experimental and numerical diagrams properly agree and allow identifying how the increasing proportion of fibres can be reflected in the trilinear softening function that numerically drives the damage evolution.
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Details
1 Departamento de Ingeniería Mecánica y Minera. Universidad de Jaén. Campus Científico-Tecnológico de Linares. Avda. de la Universidad (Cinturón Sur) – Linares, Spain
2 Departamento de Ingeniería Civil-Construcción. Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. E.T.S.I. Caminos, Canales y Puertos, C/Profesor Aranguren s/n - Madrid, Spain