Summary: | Steel fiber has become a proven material that can significantly alter the behavior of different types of concrete mixtures from brittle to more ductile ones. Rich literature is currently available on the mechanical properties of steel fiber-reinforced self-compacting concrete. However, the investigation of the impact resistance of this material to drop weight is still required to enrich the knowledge about its behavior under different loading conditions. An experimental work was conducted in this research to evaluate the performance of steel fiber-reinforced self-compacting concrete under repeated impact loading using the repeated blows test recommended by ACI 544-2R. The tests investigated the effect of drop weight and drop height in addition to fiber content. Straight micro-steel fibers were incorporated in three volumetric contents of 0.5, 0.75 and 1.0% and were compared with a similar plain mixture. The test equipment was adjusted to conduct repeated impact loading from different drop-heights and using different drop-weights. The adopted drop-heights were 450, 575 and 700 mm, while the adopted drop-weights were 4.5, 6.0 and 7.5 kg. The combination of the adopted drop-heights and weights composes four loading cases in addition to the standard loading case with a drop-weight and drop-height of 4.5 kg and 450 mm. The inclusion of micro steel fiber was found to significantly increase the impact resistance of self-compacting concrete with percentage developments ranging from 150 to 860% compared to plain samples. The specimens tested under 4.5 kg and 450 mm drop weight and height exhibited the highest percentage improvement in impact resistance among the five loading cases. The results also showed that the impact ductility of fibrous specimens was up to 24% higher than that of plain specimens.
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