Abstract
In the last decade, the shear strength of concrete members with rectangular cross sections reinforced with fiber-reinforced polymers (FRPs) has received considerable attention. Yet no research seems to have investigated circular concrete members reinforced with FRP reinforcement under shear loads. This paper presents the results of an investigation of the shear strength and behavior of six circular concrete specimens reinforced with glass-FRP (GFRP) bars and spirals. The specimens, which measured 3,000 mm in length by 500 mm in diameter, were tested under four-point bending. The test parameters included the shear span-to-depth ratio (a/d) ranging from 1.5 to 3.0 and the GFRP spiral reinforcement ratio with different spiral spacings (100, 150, and 200 mm) and spiral diameters (13 and 15 mm). As designed, the specimens failed in shear due to GFRP spiral rupture or flexural-shear failure for the specimens with a/d>2.5 and strut crushing combined with spiral rupture for the specimens with a/d<2.5. The experimental results were compared to the current sectional models and the strut-and-tie model in codes and design guidelines as well as to the available analytical approach, which is based on the modified compression field theory. The comparison indicates that the shear capacity of FRP-reinforced concrete members with circular cross sections may be determined with the shear design provisions developed for rectangular sections within a variable degree of conservativeness.
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