Experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concrete

This research presents an experimental finding on the mechanical properties of concrete with waste steel scrap. The recycling of scrap metal as a concrete base reinforcement eliminates the issue of disposal. The laboratory tests for compressive strength and splitting tensile strength were conducted...

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Main Author: Yohannes Werkina Shewalul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-06-01
Series:Case Studies in Construction Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450952100005X
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spelling doaj-186df3f183184f10ad91a7864690ed982021-05-30T04:43:16ZengElsevierCase Studies in Construction Materials2214-50952021-06-0114e00490Experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concreteYohannes Werkina Shewalul0Civil Engineering Department, Jimma Institute of Technology, Jimma University, EthiopiaThis research presents an experimental finding on the mechanical properties of concrete with waste steel scrap. The recycling of scrap metal as a concrete base reinforcement eliminates the issue of disposal. The laboratory tests for compressive strength and splitting tensile strength were conducted for different percentages of waste steel scrap (0%, 0.5 %, 0.75 %, and 1.5 %) determined by the volume of concrete. The compression behavior was obtained using uniaxial compression tests while the tensile behavior was obtained using splitting tensile tests. Laboratory testing of 12 cubic specimens and 12-cylinder specimens was conducted on the 28th day of curing. With the addition of waste steel scrap, it was found in the test results that the compressive strength increased by 26.8 % for 0.5 %, 30.7 % for 0.75 %, and reduced by 5.3 % for 1.5 % by volume of concrete. The splitting tensile strength increased by 11.2 % for 0.5 %, 5.8 % for 0.75 % and 2.5 % for 1.5 % by volume of concrete. The test outcomes showed that the modulus of elasticity and peak strain contains a remarkable increment with the increase in waste steel scrap volume. Compared with plain concrete, the strength properties of concrete with steel scrap were improved, however, with an increased amount of waste scrap, the workability of concrete was reduced.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450952100005XFiber-reinforcementCompressive strengthSteel scrap fiberTensile propertiesWorkability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yohannes Werkina Shewalul
spellingShingle Yohannes Werkina Shewalul
Experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concrete
Case Studies in Construction Materials
Fiber-reinforcement
Compressive strength
Steel scrap fiber
Tensile properties
Workability
author_facet Yohannes Werkina Shewalul
author_sort Yohannes Werkina Shewalul
title Experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concrete
title_short Experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concrete
title_full Experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concrete
title_fullStr Experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concrete
title_full_unstemmed Experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concrete
title_sort experimental study of the effect of waste steel scrap as reinforcing material on the mechanical properties of concrete
publisher Elsevier
series Case Studies in Construction Materials
issn 2214-5095
publishDate 2021-06-01
description This research presents an experimental finding on the mechanical properties of concrete with waste steel scrap. The recycling of scrap metal as a concrete base reinforcement eliminates the issue of disposal. The laboratory tests for compressive strength and splitting tensile strength were conducted for different percentages of waste steel scrap (0%, 0.5 %, 0.75 %, and 1.5 %) determined by the volume of concrete. The compression behavior was obtained using uniaxial compression tests while the tensile behavior was obtained using splitting tensile tests. Laboratory testing of 12 cubic specimens and 12-cylinder specimens was conducted on the 28th day of curing. With the addition of waste steel scrap, it was found in the test results that the compressive strength increased by 26.8 % for 0.5 %, 30.7 % for 0.75 %, and reduced by 5.3 % for 1.5 % by volume of concrete. The splitting tensile strength increased by 11.2 % for 0.5 %, 5.8 % for 0.75 % and 2.5 % for 1.5 % by volume of concrete. The test outcomes showed that the modulus of elasticity and peak strain contains a remarkable increment with the increase in waste steel scrap volume. Compared with plain concrete, the strength properties of concrete with steel scrap were improved, however, with an increased amount of waste scrap, the workability of concrete was reduced.
topic Fiber-reinforcement
Compressive strength
Steel scrap fiber
Tensile properties
Workability
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450952100005X
work_keys_str_mv AT yohanneswerkinashewalul experimentalstudyoftheeffectofwastesteelscrapasreinforcingmaterialonthemechanicalpropertiesofconcrete
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