Title: Fibre Reinforced Polymer (FRP)
1Fiber Reinforced Concrete(FRC)
2 Feisal salah Introduction
- Is a concrete mix that contains short discrete
fibers, uniformly distributed and randomly
oriented
- Aims to produce stronger and tougher concrete
- Can add to the tensile loading capacity of the
composite system
- Steel Fibers (SFRC)
- Glass Fibers (GFRC)
- Synthetic Fibers (SFRC)
- Natural Fibers (NFRC)
3Advantages
- Ease of installation
- Concrete placement and crack control in one
operation - No requirement for crack control steel mesh
- Increased cohesion of the mix
- Reduced bleeding of water to the surface
4Disadvantages
- Greater reduction of workability
- High cost of the materials
5Steel Fiber Reinforce Concrete
- Increases strain capacity and impact resistance
- Improved resistance to impact and greater
ductility of failure in compression, flexure and
torsion - High tensile strength (0.5 2 GPa)
- Modulus of elasticity (200 GPa)
- Ductile/plastic stress-strain characteristic
- Low creep
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11Glass Fiber Reinforced Concrete
- Mixed by Portland cement, fine aggregates, water
and alkali-resistant glass fibers - High tensile strength (2 4 GPa)
- Elastic modulus (70 80 GPa)
- Brittle stress-strain characteristics (2.5 4.8
elongation at break) - Low creep at room temperature
12Synthetic Fiber Reinforced Concrete
- Man-made fibers from petrochemical and textile
industries - Low-volume percentage (0.1 to 0.3 by volume)
- high-volume percentage (0.4 to 0.8 by volume)
13Selected Synthetic Fiber Types and Properties
14Types of Synthetic Fiber Reinforced Concrete
- Acrylic
- Aramid
- Carbon
- Nylon
- Polyester
- Polyethylene
- Polypropylene
15Natural Fiber Reinforced Concrete
- Obtained at low cost and low levels of energy
using local manpower and technology - Unprocessed natural fibers
- - made with unprocessed natural fibers such
as coconut coir, sisal, sugarcane bagasse,
bamboo, jute, wood and vegetable - Processed natural fibers
- - Wood cellulose is the most frequently
16Typical Properties of Natural Fibers
17Application of FRC
- Applications for new construction
- Bridge
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- Repair and rehabilitation applications
- Beam and Slab
- Architectural applications
- Interior Design
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19Use of Carbon FRC as reinforcement of a concrete
slab
20Comparison
Fiber Reinforced Concrete (FRC) Normal Reinforce Concrete
Higher durability Lower durability
Protect steel from corrosion Steel potential to corrosion
Lighter (materials) Heavier (materials)
More Expensive Economical
With the same of volume, the strength is greater With the same of volume, the strength is less.
higher workability Less workability as compare to FRP
21Conclusion
- FRC - very costly
- - normally apply on bridge constructions
- - the ability to sustain a load without
- excessive deformation or failure
- - used as external reinforcement in the
- rehabilitation of reinforced
concrete (RC) - beams and slabs
- - architects used it as
siding/cladding, - roofing, flooring and partitions