Development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment

Corrosion has been the leading cause of reinforced concrete structure degradation. Structures in marine environments are susceptible to accelerated corrosion due to the presence of chloride. Corrosion due to chloride attack is known to be fast and severe. Corrosion products are typically 3 to 6 time...

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Main Author: Clemente, Stephen John C.
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Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2023
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etdd_civ/3
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/etdd_civ/article/1004/viewcontent/Development_of_steel_fiber_reinforced_self_compacting_concrete_fo_Redacted.pdf
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etdd_civ-10042023-07-07T00:05:52Z Development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment Clemente, Stephen John C. Corrosion has been the leading cause of reinforced concrete structure degradation. Structures in marine environments are susceptible to accelerated corrosion due to the presence of chloride. Corrosion due to chloride attack is known to be fast and severe. Corrosion products are typically 3 to 6 times the volume of steel reinforcement, which can induce stress that will cause cracks. The rate of corrosion is affected by the permeability of concrete and its durability to prevent or at least delay the cracks. These ideas were capitalized on in improving the concrete's corrosion resistance. Self-compacting concrete was used as a reference because of its established advantages, such as low porosity and permeability due to its low water content and high cement factor, which improves the passivation of rebar. In order to improve the durability, steel fiber is added to the developed concrete. The addition of steel fiber improves the cracking resistance of concrete, and some of the steel fiber can be attached to the rebar, which redirects the flow of current and serves as a sacrificial anode in reference to the literature. Models derived based on material constituents (cement, w/c, SP, and steel fiber) predict the following responses, slump flow (R2=0.847), l-box (R2=0.626), gtm (R2=0.727), fc’ (R2=0.432), 5-day corrosion (R2=0.998), 15-day corrosion (R2=0.626). The cement ratio has been the leading factor that affects the responses with p-values of >0.05, 0.276, >0.05, 0.33, >0.05, and >0.05, respectively. Steel fiber has also been significant to most responses, including the corrosion level. The P-values calculated for each response were, 0.944, >0.05, 0.235, 0.0669, >0.05, and >0.05. The corrosion level of SFRSCC is lower by 45.41% by average as compared to SFRC design mixes. This research also successfully developed charts that can used as a substitute for the troubleshooting guide for design mix of SFRSCC. The optimal design mix was calculated using the derived models. Several criteria were set, such as, the mixture should yield acceptable rheological properties in accordance with EFNARC, the compressive strength should be greater than 28Mpa, and the corrosion level should be minimized. The optimum design mix has a projected 15-day corrosion level of 6.8%, which is lower than the lowest corrosion level from the data used. The derived optimum design mix has cement (469.76kg), w/c (0.4), SP (0.734%) and steel fiber (30%). 2023-05-15T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etdd_civ/3 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/etdd_civ/article/1004/viewcontent/Development_of_steel_fiber_reinforced_self_compacting_concrete_fo_Redacted.pdf Civil Engineering Dissertations English Animo Repository Self-consolidating concrete Reinforced concrete—Corrosion Civil Engineering
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Self-consolidating concrete
Reinforced concrete—Corrosion
Civil Engineering
spellingShingle Self-consolidating concrete
Reinforced concrete—Corrosion
Civil Engineering
Clemente, Stephen John C.
Development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment
description Corrosion has been the leading cause of reinforced concrete structure degradation. Structures in marine environments are susceptible to accelerated corrosion due to the presence of chloride. Corrosion due to chloride attack is known to be fast and severe. Corrosion products are typically 3 to 6 times the volume of steel reinforcement, which can induce stress that will cause cracks. The rate of corrosion is affected by the permeability of concrete and its durability to prevent or at least delay the cracks. These ideas were capitalized on in improving the concrete's corrosion resistance. Self-compacting concrete was used as a reference because of its established advantages, such as low porosity and permeability due to its low water content and high cement factor, which improves the passivation of rebar. In order to improve the durability, steel fiber is added to the developed concrete. The addition of steel fiber improves the cracking resistance of concrete, and some of the steel fiber can be attached to the rebar, which redirects the flow of current and serves as a sacrificial anode in reference to the literature. Models derived based on material constituents (cement, w/c, SP, and steel fiber) predict the following responses, slump flow (R2=0.847), l-box (R2=0.626), gtm (R2=0.727), fc’ (R2=0.432), 5-day corrosion (R2=0.998), 15-day corrosion (R2=0.626). The cement ratio has been the leading factor that affects the responses with p-values of >0.05, 0.276, >0.05, 0.33, >0.05, and >0.05, respectively. Steel fiber has also been significant to most responses, including the corrosion level. The P-values calculated for each response were, 0.944, >0.05, 0.235, 0.0669, >0.05, and >0.05. The corrosion level of SFRSCC is lower by 45.41% by average as compared to SFRC design mixes. This research also successfully developed charts that can used as a substitute for the troubleshooting guide for design mix of SFRSCC. The optimal design mix was calculated using the derived models. Several criteria were set, such as, the mixture should yield acceptable rheological properties in accordance with EFNARC, the compressive strength should be greater than 28Mpa, and the corrosion level should be minimized. The optimum design mix has a projected 15-day corrosion level of 6.8%, which is lower than the lowest corrosion level from the data used. The derived optimum design mix has cement (469.76kg), w/c (0.4), SP (0.734%) and steel fiber (30%).
format text
author Clemente, Stephen John C.
author_facet Clemente, Stephen John C.
author_sort Clemente, Stephen John C.
title Development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment
title_short Development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment
title_full Development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment
title_fullStr Development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment
title_full_unstemmed Development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment
title_sort development of steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete for high chloride environment
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2023
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etdd_civ/3
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/etdd_civ/article/1004/viewcontent/Development_of_steel_fiber_reinforced_self_compacting_concrete_fo_Redacted.pdf
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