Compressive stress-strain behaviour of cement mortar-composites reinforced with short sisal fibre

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

Mat. Res.

DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

05/11/2013

RESUMO

To design building elements using sisal fibre reinforced mortar composites, the stress-strain curves of the composites both under tensile and compression load is needed. In this study short sisal fibre-cement based composites were developed and their stress-strain behaviour under compression characterized experimentally. The composites consisted of two mortar matrices, one self-compacting and one of normal consistency, reinforced with randomly distributed short sisal fibre (25 and 50 mm long) in volume fractions ranging from 2% to 6%. Based on the experimental results a compressive constitutive law for the composites was proposed based on the damage theory developed by Mazars (1986). This theory was used to model the ascending branch of the stress-strain curve and a damage parameter associated to the fibre-reinforcing index is proposed to allow the modelling of the post-peak behaviour of the composites. The modified model was then validated using results available in the literature. The experimental results obtained in the study indicated that the addition of short sisal fibres to cement matrices tends to reduce its elastic modulus, peak stress and strain and to increase its toughness. However, the use of a self-compacting matrix allowed better sisal fiber dispersion and composites with superior performance were obtained. The modified analytical model was able to predict with good accuracy the ascending and descending branch of the stress-strain curves of the sisal fiber-mortar composites and allowed evaluating the effect of fibre reinforcing index on material damage. In the ascending branch, an increase in the damage from 40% to 70% is recorded for fiber volume ranging from 2 to 6%. In the descending branch, on the other hand, the variation of fiber volume allowed a reduction of the damage from 65% to 60%.

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