Abstract

This paper examines the punching shear behavior of a new concrete flat slab design, incorporating a glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) stay-in-place (SIP) structural form system and orthogonal GFRP top rebar mesh. The SIP form system comprises I-beams supported on the four sides of a column and flat plates with T-up ribs supported by, and adhesively bonded to, the bottom flanges of the I-beams. The web and top flange of the I-beams are embedded in the slab, thereby providing flexural and shear reinforcement, while the SIP ribbed plates provide the bottom reinforcement. Four full-scale interior slab–column specimens, 2000 × 2000 × 200 mm3, were tested under axial compression applied to the column. The slabs have a central 300 × 300-mm square column extending 300 mm on either side of the slab. The study assessed the contributions to punching shear strength of different components of the GFRP system. The new design experienced a 29% higher punching shear strength than the control slab with GFRP rebar only, and was much more ductile. The load dropped gradually over a large range of deflection, increasing the ductility index from 1.6 in the control slab to 3.1 in the slab incorporating the new design. An analytical model is developed for punching shear strength, accounting for concrete contribution and flexural and web contributions of I-beams. Results agreed with experimental strength, within −6% to +13%. A parametric study examined a range of rebar reinforcement ratios, different GFRP I-beam sizes and a comparable steel I-beam.

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