Abstract

The purpose of this study is to investigate the influence of adhesive types on the interfacial behavior of externally bonded basalt fiber reinforced polymer (BFRP) sheet-concrete substrate. Twelve manufactured double-lap shear samples were tested using four bonding adhesives. The strains on the surface of BFRP‐concrete joint were determined using electrical resistance strain gauge together with two‐dimensional digital image correlation technique (2D‐DIC). Experimental results show that properties of different bonding adhesives i.e., stiff (linear elastic, higher strength) and soft (nonlinear elastic, lower modulus, higher ultimate strain) has a significant impact on the failure mode, stiffness, ultimate load, strain and shear stress distribution nonetheless not so much on bond-slip relationship. The failure modes of specimens changed from interfacial debonding or cohesive failure in concrete substrate for stiff adhesive specimens to debonding in adhesive layer when soft adhesives are used. Stiff adhesive interfaces experienced higher ultimate loads from 1.1 to 1.3 times higher than soft adhesive interface. Meanwhile soft adhesives are shown to possess a lower maximum shear stress, higher interfacial fracture energy and longer stress transfer length.

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