Abstract

In this study, steel fiber-reinforced concrete (SFRC) beam structures with regular oriented steel fibers are designed and prepared by using an assembled solenoid device. Fiber orientation is not arranged in a single direction but is similar to the direction of tensile stress of the beam in bending load conditions. With application of inductive test method and image processing technology, fiber orientation coefficient of SFRC was evaluated and increased from 0.5 to 0.7–0.8 after fiber alignment. To describe and analyze the flexural behavior of SFRC beams with regular oriented fibers and glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) rebars, 14 concrete beams with different parameters were fabricated and subjected to a four-point bending test. Specifically, the parameters included fiber content, fiber orientation, GFRP reinforcement ratio and different layer sections. The results showed that optimizing fiber orientations to the tension zone of the section led to a higher flexural strength and can well restrain the development of crack widths with comparison to randomly distributed fibers. The peak load and energy absorption increased by 7 % and 12.4 % after fiber alignment with a fiber volume fraction of 1.5 %. The combination of randomly and regularly distributed steel fibers in the form of two-layer composite members can be an efficient solution to improve the flexural performance for purpose of the optimum distribution and direction of steel fibers, and reduce the engineering cost.

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