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A feasibility study of strain hardening fiber reinforced fly ash-based geopolymer composites
Highlights Strain-hardening ductile fly ash-based geopolymer composite was demonstrated. The tensile ductility of the composite could reach over 4%. Crack pattern analysis was conducted by Digital Image Correlation. The maximum and average crack widths are 117 and 45μm, respectively, at 4.5% strain.
Abstract Fly ash-based geopolymer has been intensively studied as a promising alternative to ordinary cement materials. While geopolymer concrete has good strength and excellent material greenness, applications have been limited to niche or small scale applications. In order to use geopolymer for large scale structural applications, the inherent brittleness should be addressed. In this study, strain-hardening ductile fiber reinforced geopolymer composites were developed by using randomly oriented short Poly-Vinyl Alcohol (PVA) fibers. Subsequently, their mechanical properties were investigated by cube compressive and dogbone tensile testing. Tensile strain hardening behavior with very high ductility of over 4% was experimentally demonstrated for the developed composites. These performances were found to be further improved by utilizing temperature curing methods. Crack width distributions were also investigated by using the Digital Image Correlation technique. The analysis indicated that the maximum and average crack widths are 117μm and 45μm, respectively, even at a high imposed strain level of 4.5%. Therefore, the feasibility of strain-hardening ductile geopolymer composites was established.
A feasibility study of strain hardening fiber reinforced fly ash-based geopolymer composites
Highlights Strain-hardening ductile fly ash-based geopolymer composite was demonstrated. The tensile ductility of the composite could reach over 4%. Crack pattern analysis was conducted by Digital Image Correlation. The maximum and average crack widths are 117 and 45μm, respectively, at 4.5% strain.
Abstract Fly ash-based geopolymer has been intensively studied as a promising alternative to ordinary cement materials. While geopolymer concrete has good strength and excellent material greenness, applications have been limited to niche or small scale applications. In order to use geopolymer for large scale structural applications, the inherent brittleness should be addressed. In this study, strain-hardening ductile fiber reinforced geopolymer composites were developed by using randomly oriented short Poly-Vinyl Alcohol (PVA) fibers. Subsequently, their mechanical properties were investigated by cube compressive and dogbone tensile testing. Tensile strain hardening behavior with very high ductility of over 4% was experimentally demonstrated for the developed composites. These performances were found to be further improved by utilizing temperature curing methods. Crack width distributions were also investigated by using the Digital Image Correlation technique. The analysis indicated that the maximum and average crack widths are 117μm and 45μm, respectively, even at a high imposed strain level of 4.5%. Therefore, the feasibility of strain-hardening ductile geopolymer composites was established.
A feasibility study of strain hardening fiber reinforced fly ash-based geopolymer composites
Ohno, Motohiro (author) / Li, Victor C. (author)
Construction and Building Materials ; 57 ; 163-168
2014-02-04
6 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
A feasibility study of strain hardening fiber reinforced fly ash-based geopolymer composites
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