Influence of Polyvinyl Alcohol, Steel, and Hybrid Fibers on Fresh and Rheological Properties of Self-Consolidating Concrete

AbstractFiber-reinforced self-consolidating concrete (FRSCC) has a tremendous potential to be used in construction industry because it combines the advantages of both self-consolidating concrete (SCC) and fiber-reinforced concrete (FRC). Nineteen concrete mixtures are developed by incorporating diff...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials in civil engineering 2012-09, Vol.24 (9), p.1211-1220
Hauptverfasser: Hossain, K. M. A, Lachemi, M, Sammour, M, Sonebi, M
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container_end_page 1220
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1211
container_title Journal of materials in civil engineering
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creator Hossain, K. M. A
Lachemi, M
Sammour, M
Sonebi, M
description AbstractFiber-reinforced self-consolidating concrete (FRSCC) has a tremendous potential to be used in construction industry because it combines the advantages of both self-consolidating concrete (SCC) and fiber-reinforced concrete (FRC). Nineteen concrete mixtures are developed by incorporating different dosages (up to 0.5% volume or 22  kg/m3 of concrete) of polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and metallic fibers and their combinations. The influences of fiber types, size, dosages, and fiber combinations (used in hybrid mixes) on fresh (slump flow, L-box passing ability, V-funnel flow time, and segregation index—a measure of workability) and rheological (viscosity and yield stress at various time intervals ranging from 10 to 70 min) properties are critically analyzed on the basis of experimental results. The workability/rheological properties of concrete mixtures are found to depend on types, dosages, geometry of fiber, and in cases of hybrid mixtures, interaction and synergic properties between different fiber types also play a critical role. The maximum dosage of PVA is limited to 0.125% compared with 0.3% of metallic fibers in developed FRSCC mixtures because of PVA’s higher workability reduction/viscosity increase capability. In addition, relationships among fresh/workability and rheological properties are also established.
doi_str_mv 10.1061/(ASCE)MT.1943-5533.0000490
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source American Society of Civil Engineers:NESLI2:Journals:2014
subjects Applied sciences
Buildings. Public works
Concrete industry
Concretes
Concretes. Mortars. Grouts
Dosage
Exact sciences and technology
Fibers
Materials
Other special applications (sand concrete, roller compacted concrete, heavy concrete, architectural concrete, etc.)
Polyvinyl alcohols
Rheological properties
Self-compacting concrete
Technical Papers
Workability
title Influence of Polyvinyl Alcohol, Steel, and Hybrid Fibers on Fresh and Rheological Properties of Self-Consolidating Concrete
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