Effect of Steel Fibers on Compressive Strength of Recycled Aggregate Concrete
Pubblicato online: 14 mag 2023
Pagine: 123 - 130
Ricevuto: 15 gen 2023
Accettato: 23 feb 2023
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/jaes-2023-0016
Parole chiave
© 2023 Iram Shaikh et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
In this research article effect of steel fibers on workability and compressive strength of recycled aggregate concrete is presented. Recycled aggregates from demolished waste were used in equal proportion with conventional aggregates. Steel fibers of 1 mm diameter and 25 mm length were used. For preparation of concrete 1:2:4 mix with 0.55 water-cement ratio was used. Workability of each mix was checked by slump cone test. Total of 40 samples were prepared in standard way and cured for 28 days. All the specimens were tested for maximum load in universal testing machine under gradually increasing load at the rate of 0.5 kN/sec. Recorded load was converted into compressive strength. The obtained results showed that slump of the concrete decreased with increase in the dosage of the steel fibers than conventional concrete. Compressive strength was observed 15% and 34% higher than the compressive strength of conventional and recycled aggregate concrete at the steel fiber dosage of 3%. It is evident that although addition of recycled aggregates in concrete reduces the compressive strength but binary blending with steel fibers not only overcomes this loss but shows strength gain with increase in the dosage of the fibers.