Impact of polypropylene fibers on the rheological, mechanical, andthermal properties of self-compacting concrete
Article : Articles dans des revues internationales ou nationales avec comité de lecture
The objective of this experimental investigation is to examine the impact of using polypropylene fibers on the properties of self-compacting concrete (SCC). Five mixtures were prepared, one reference concrete (without fibers) and four other SCC containing, 0.05,0.1, 0.15, and 0.2% of polypropylenes fibers. Rheological (slump flow, yield stress, and plastic viscosity) and mechanical (compressivestrength) properties as well as the thermal conductivity and porosity were evaluated.
The results indicate that increasing fiberspercentage affect negatively the workability and compressive strength of concrete. For example, addition of 0.2% of polypropylenefibers fell the mixes outside the range of self-compacting concretes and reduced their compressive strength by 20% compared toreference concrete. For the same percentage of fibers (0.2%), results revealed an increase of 23% of the total porosity in comparisonwith reference concrete. Interestingly, increasing polypropylene fibers’ percentage
decreased remarkably the thermal conductivityof concrete; enhancing thus its thermal performance.