Abstract

A novel highly compressible auxetic cementitious composite (ACC) is developed in this work. Contrary to conventional cementitious materials, such as plain concrete and fiber reinforced concrete, the ACC shows strain-hardening behavior under uniaxial compression: the stress continuously increases with strain up to approximately 40 % strain. On one hand, in the early compression stage, the ACC exhibit highly recoverable deformability of 10 % strain under cyclic loading (20 times higher than the constituent cementitious material). In addition, the ACC shows fatigue damage until the stiffness/strength and energy dissipation plateau values are reached after 500 cycles. At 2.5 % strain amplitude, the plateau stiffness/strength is approximately 120 MPa/3 MPa, while these values are only 25 MPa/1.2 MPa at 5 % strain amplitude. In contrast, the energy dissipation plateau of the ACC is independent from the amplitude and remains at 0.05 J/cm3. On the other hand, due to the strain-hardening behavior, the ACC exhibits significantly improved energy dissipation capacity compared to both the conventional cementitious materials and the auxetic frame. This behavior is achieved by a tailored composite action: integrating cementitious mortar with 3D printed thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) auxetic frame. A rotating-square auxetic mechanism was designed for the TPU frame for the ACC to achieve the tailored cracking behavior. The horizontal ACC cells enable large deformability by enlarging the crack width under the confinement of the auxetic frame, while the vertical cells work as stiffening phase to ensure load resistance. Owing to the outstanding mechanical properties, the ACC shows great potential to be applied in engineering practice where high compressive deformability is required, for instance yielding elements for squeezing tunnel linings.

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