Abstract

Due to the lack of relevant research, the effect of the lateral confinement provided by stirrups and concrete cover on the bond behavior between glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) bars and concrete is ambiguous, resulting in the lack of a practical bond slip theory of GFRP bars. Therefore, it is impossible to accurately analyze the load response of GFRP-reinforced concrete (RC) structures from the stress level. In this paper, the local bond behavior of ribbed GFRP bars was systematically analyzed by the beam-end tests. The test parameters include concrete strength, stirrup spacing, and concrete cover. In addition, a bond stress-slip model considering the bonding mechanism was proposed on the basis of the beam-end tests and previous research. The results show that, the development of concrete cracks is restricted due to the existence of stirrups, and the specimens tend to fail in pull-out failure with strong confinement of stirrups. With the increase in the lateral confinement level, the failure mode of specimens transits gradually and smoothly from splitting failure to pull-out failure. Meanwhile, the peak slip of specimens with splitting failure also increases, and its maximum value does not exceed the peak slip of the corresponding specimens with pull-out failure. The confining capacity of stirrups and concrete cover was unified by a proposed parameter K. Then, a bond stress-slip model based on parameter K was established to predict the bond behavior of ribbed GFRP bars.

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