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Interface Property and Apparent Strength of High-Strength Hydrophilic Fiber in Cement Matrix

372

Citations

22

References

1998

Year

TLDR

The study aims to characterize the interfacial properties and apparent strength of high‑strength hydrophilic fibers in cement. The authors performed single‑fiber pullout and pull‑to‑rupture tests on PVA fibers and developed a phenomenological model introducing an apparent strength reduction factor. The fibers exhibit unexpectedly high chemical and frictional bond strengths, yet their apparent strength in cement composites is markedly lower than in standard tests and decreases with fiber inclination, suggesting that the high bond strength coupled with degraded fiber strength may limit composite performance.

Abstract

This study addresses the characterization of fiber-matrix interfacial properties and the apparent strength of high-strength hydrophilic fibers. Single-fiber pullout bond tests and single-fiber pull-to-rupture strength tests were conducted by employing polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) fibers. The pullout bond tests showed that these fibers have surprisingly high chemical and frictional bond strengths. The chemical bond strength was relatively stable independent of a water-to-cement ratio of matrix and the fiber type tested, contrary to the friction bond strength. The pull-to-rupture strength tests revealed that the apparent strength of the PVA fibers in cementitious composites is considerably lower than that in standard fiber strength tests. The apparent strength was further reduced with inclining angle of fiber alignment. This effect was captured by a simple phenomenological model in this study, which introduces the apparent strength reduction factor. The combined effects of high bond strength and degraded fiber strength will likely contribute to composite performance less than would be expected from a high-performance fiber.

References

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