Shear strengthening of reinforced structures with carbon reinforced concrete

Research output: Contribution to book/Conference proceedings/Anthology/ReportConference contributionContributedpeer-review

Contributors

Abstract

Nowadays, many existing buildings and bridges fulfil no longer the requirement of shear resistance acc. to the Eurocode, because they are structurally deficient to some extent, or the load demands have increased beyond the structure’s original load carrying capacity. That is why it is necessary to strengthen the constructions sustainably. Carbon reinforced concrete (CRC) is one feasible option to improve the shear load capacity. Thereby grids made of carbon fibres with a high tensile strength are placed in a thin shotcrete layer to carry the additional shear force. As a part of the current study, a T-beam geometry with a practical orientation was strengthened with two different carbon grids representing the current state of the art in reinforcing textile technology and afterwards tested to demonstrate the increase of the shear load-bearing capacity due to strengthening with CRC. Thereby, the configuration of the textiles in the strengthening layers varied. It was possible to increase the load up to 140% compared with an unstrengthened T-beam.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the fib Symposium 2019: Concrete - Innovations in Materials, Design and Structures
EditorsWit Derkowski, Piotr Gwozdziewicz, Lukasz Hojdys, Piotr Krajewski, Marek Pantak
Publisherfib. The International Federation for Structural Concrete
Pages1563-1570
Number of pages8
ISBN (print)9782940643004
Publication statusPublished - 2019
Peer-reviewedYes

Publication series

Seriesfib Symposium 2019
ISSN2617-4820

Conference

Titlefib Symposium 2019
SubtitleConcrete - Innovations in Materials, Design and Structures
Duration27 - 29 May 2019
LocationBest Western Premier Kraków Hotel
CityKraków
CountryPoland

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0002-1596-7164/work/142255614

Keywords

Keywords

  • Carbon reinforced concrete, Large-scale tests, Numerical recalculation, Shear strengthening