Effect of fiber amount on properties of polypropylene fiber reinforced roller compacted concrete release_34qhe7b2mffyjedo7efditaafe

by Ismail Kilic, Kirklareli University, Faculty of Engineering, Department of Civil Engineering, 39100 (Turkey), Saadet Gokce Gok, Kirklareli University, Faculty of Engineering, Department of Civil Engineering, 39100 (Turkey)

Published in Revista de la construcción by Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile.

2021   Volume 20, p205-214

Abstract

Roller compacted concrete (RCC) is a relatively new alternative construction material that can be used in road and dam constructions by allowing rapid use after production and the use of conventional building materials in production. RCC, which can be produced with low water/cement ratio, is one of the rigid road pavement types and shows similarity to flexible road pavements with the production technique. Different types of fibers such as steel and polypropylene (PP) are used in concrete roads with the aim of preventing cracks, reducing the pavement thickness and increasing the permissible joint gap. In this study, flexural strength, compressive strength, unit weight, water absorption, ultrasonic pulse velocity, modulus of elasticity and freeze-thaw resistance were determined in roller compacted concretes produced by using two different polypropylene-based fibers. In RCC design, fiber addition was insufficient to improve concrete properties in terms of strength and durability. It has been observed that there was a 14.4% reduction in compressive strength with 0.20% fiber inclusion, and a 46.8% reduction in compressive strength with 0.50% fiber inclusion. Polypropylene fiber inclusion increased the water absorption percentages and decreased the specific weights of fiber reinforced roller compacted concretes. However, roller compacted concretes produced with PP-fiber exhibited a good performance under freeze-thaw attack.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   801.8 kB
file_2f6x7yd4tfgqrf2t4d46rpie7u
ojs.uc.cl (publisher)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
application/pdf   802.0 kB
file_btseg6yjv5gj3eekb6jzyfdt3q
www.scielo.cl (repository)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Year   2021
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: a058001b-b6f2-4466-b5fb-936cbd4edb8d
API URL: JSON