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The effect of length and inclination of carbon fiber reinforced polymer laminates on shear capacity of near‐surface mounted retrofitted reinforced concrete beams

Mohammad A. Alzubi, Mizi Fan, Yousef S. Al Rjoub, Ahmed Ashteyat, Mazen J. Al‐Kheetan, Lorna Anguilano

2021Structural Concrete34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This study undertakes a comprehensive investigation of the shear behavior of reinforced concrete (RC) beams strengthened by near surface mounted (NSM) carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) laminates. Different strengthening configurations were employed by varying the length and inclination angle of the CFRP laminates. Results indicated that NSM‐CFRP strengthening increased the load‐carrying capacity, ductility, stiffness, and toughness from 8% to 41%, 9% to 78%, 24% to 159%, and 22% to 254%, respectively. Results also confirmed that as the CFRP laminate length decreases, the efficacy of the strengthening process increases, where the load‐carrying capacity, ductility, stiffness, and toughness improved from 8% to 19%, 10% to 21%, 8% to 68%, and 26% to 119%, respectively. Also, the comparative results revealed that specimens strengthened with 45°‐inclined CFRP laminates versus those strengthened with vertical laminates had higher load‐carrying capacity (2%–10%), ductility (1%–35%), stiffness (24%–40%), and toughness (13%–32%). Two analytical formulations to predict the contribution of the possible distinct NSM‐CFRP shear strengthening configurations for the shear resistance of RC beams were considered. Results indicated an agreement between the experimental and the analytical results for both formulas, where the average values for the safety factor, k , were 0.80 and 0.73, with corresponding values of standard deviation of 0.195 and 0.125, respectively.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceStiffnessComposite materialDuctility (Earth science)Carbon fiber reinforced polymerToughnessShear (geology)Fibre-reinforced plasticStructural engineeringUltimate loadReinforced concreteFinite element methodEngineeringCreepStructural Behavior of Reinforced ConcreteInnovative concrete reinforcement materialsConcrete Corrosion and Durability