Abstract

An experimental study has been conducted on a reduced-scale gravity-load designed test frame to investigate its overall performance due to the addition of steel fiber-reinforced concrete (SFRC) at the critical regions. Two geometrically similar specimens, namely, reinforced concrete (RC) and SFRC, are tested under slow-cyclic lateral loading. End-hooked steel fibers (aspect ratio = 80) of 1.0% volume fraction were used in the SFRC mix for a distance of one-and-half times the member size near the joint regions. The addition of steel fibers improved the damage tolerance, lateral load resisting capacity, lateral stiffness, ductility, and energy dissipation of the frame.

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