Fiber reinforced concrete: Residual flexure strength enhancement using surface modified fibers

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Abstract

Fiber reinforced concrete often fails due to poor adhesion between polymer fibers and the cement matrix which is caused by fiber flat and chemically inert surfaces. Such a phenomenon can be overcome by modifying the fibers with plasma treatment which activate and roughen their surfaces. Polypropylene-polyethylene and polypropylene macro-fibers were exposed to low-pressure cold dioxygen plasma treatment for 30 seconds. In order to quantify how plasma treated fibers can affect mechanical response of fiber reinforced concrete, notched specimens containing 0.75 vol. % of reinforcement were made and subjected to three-point bending test. It was shown that specimens with modified fibers exhibited up to 40 % improvement in residual flexural tensile strength than those containing reference reinforcement.

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Tichá, P., Domonkos, M., & Demo, P. (2021). Fiber reinforced concrete: Residual flexure strength enhancement using surface modified fibers. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 2322). American Institute of Physics Inc. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0042044

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