Abstract

The shear behavior of 27 basalt fiber-reinforced polymer reinforced seawater sea-sand concrete (BFRP-SSC) beams after seawater dry-wet cycling was comprehensively investigated. Parameters considered included stirrup diameter and spacing, shear span-to-depth ratio, stirrup surface treatment, cycling duration, concrete cover thickness, and seawater temperature. Results indicate that seawater dry-wet cycling increases cracking load and decreases bending stiffness in BFRP-SSC beams. Increasing shear span-to-depth ratio from 1.55 to 2.35 led to load reductions of 31.3 % and 49.7 % at 6.5 mm mid-span deflection. Seawater dry-wet cycling, particularly temperature and duration, significantly impacts the mechanical properties of stirrups. This results in diminished shear contribution and reduced efficacy in inhibiting diagonal crack propagation, leading to a shift in beam failure mode from diagonal compression failure to shear compression failure and diagonal tension failure. Increasing cycling duration from 60 to 120 days decreased tensile strength retention by 19.1 % and 33.3 % respectively. Based on experimental data, Arrhenius theory, and the time shift factor (TSF) method, a predictive model was developed for the shear capacity retention of beams subjected to seawater dry-wet cycling. Results indicate that after 100 years in a tidal environment (70 % and 90 % relative humidity), shear capacity damage factors of 0.77 and 0.52, respectively, can be applied to account for the impact of seawater dry-wet cycling on the shear capacity of BFRP-SSC beams.

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