Residual TRM-to-Concrete Bond after Freeze-Thaw Cycles

冻融循环后残余TRM与混凝土粘结力

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Abstract

In the present work, the effect of various freeze-thaw cycles (namely, 0, 10, 30, 50, 60, and 70) on the residual bond characteristics of textile reinforced mortar (TRM)-to-concrete was experimentally examined. The TRM consisted of a carbon dry fiber textile embedded in a cement-based matrix. Two mortar types were used as the matrix: a normal-weight and a lightweight one sharing the same hydraulic powders but different aggregates (limestone and pumice sand, respectively). The single-lap/single-prism set up was applied after the specimens underwent hygro-thermal treatment (according to ASTM C 666-Procedure B). Failure was due to the sleeve fibers rupturing the load aligned yarns or textile slippage from the mortar for an exposure period ranging between 0 and 60 cycles and to TRM debonding from the substrate for 70 cycles. Increasing cycles resulted in the intensification of partial interlaminar debonding phenomena and the weakening of the textile-to-matrix bond, with lightweight mortar being more prone to these effects. In the absence of a commonly accepted standardized method for the assessment of the freeze-thaw resistance of cement-based composites, the criterion for the termination of the freeze-thaw sequence was the number of cycles inferring a shift in failure mode (from fiber rupture/fiber slippage to TRM debonding from the substrate).

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