Abstract

The shortage of fresh water and river sand resources and steel corrosion are becoming increasingly prominent in engineering construction. Seawater sea sand coral aggregate concrete (SSCC) and corrosion resistant reinforcement are promising materials in replacement of conventional concrete and steel in building structures in island and reef construction. This study investigated the axial compression performance of GFRP (glass fiber reinforced polymer) and corrosion resistant rebars hybrid reinforced seawater sea sand coral aggregate concrete columns. A total of eighteen short columns were tested for axial compression performance, including three reinforcement ratios (1.01%, 1.56%, 2.26%) and 5 reinforcement types (pure GFRP reinforcement or G, pure stainless steel reinforcement or S, pure epoxy coated steel rebar (ECSB) reinforcement or E, GFRP-stainless steel reinforcement or GS and GFRP-ECSB or GE). The failure modes of the column are recorded and analyzed, and the axial bearing capacity and ductility are calculated and analyzed. Results show that the bearing capacity of columns is positively correlated with the reinforcement ratio. Generally, the bearing capacity of S-SSCC column and E-SSCC column are not significant different, but both are larger than that of G-SSCC column. The bearing capacity of hybrid reinforcement GS-SSCC and GE-SSCC column is between S-SSCC column and G-SSCC column. Meanwhile, it indicates that the theoretical calculation results of bearing capacity agree well with the experimental results. The ductility analytical results exhibit that the studied column specimens have the highest ductility when the reinforcement ratio is 1.56%. Among different reinforcement types, the ductility of G-SSCC is the smallest and the GE-SSCC and GS-SSCC column show improved ductility compared with G-SSCC columns.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call