Abstract
Owing to its excellent crack resistance and durability, High-Performance Fiber-Reinforced Concrete (HPFRC) has been extensively applied in engineering structures exposed to extreme loading conditions. The Mode I dynamic fracture strength of HPFRC under high-strain-rate conditions exhibits significant strain-rate sensitivity and nonlinear response characteristics. However, existing experimental methods for strength measurement are limited by high costs and the absence of standardized testing protocols. Meanwhile, conventional data-driven models for strength prediction struggle to achieve both high-precision prediction and physical interpretability. To address this, this study introduces a dynamic fracture strength prediction method based on a feature-weighted linear ensemble (FWL) mechanism. A comprehensive database comprising 161 sets of high-strain-rate test data on HPFRC fracture strength was first constructed. Key modeling variables were then identified through correlation analysis and an error-driven feature selection approach. Subsequently, six representative machine learning models (KNN, RF, SVR, LGBM, XGBoost, MLPNN) were employed as base learners to construct two types of ensemble models, FWL and Voting, enabling a systematic comparison of their performance. Finally, the predictive mechanisms of the models were analyzed for interpretability at both global and local scales using SHAP (SHapley Additive exPlanations) and LIME (Local Interpretable Model-agnostic Explanations) methods. The results demonstrate that the FWL model achieved optimal predictive performance on the test set (R(2) = 0.908, RMSE = 2.632), significantly outperforming both individual models and the conventional ensemble method. Interpretability analysis revealed that strain rate and fiber volume fraction are the primary factors influencing dynamic fracture strength, with strain rate demonstrating a highly nonlinear response mechanism across different ranges. The integrated prediction framework developed in this study offers the combined advantages of high accuracy, robustness, and interpretability, providing a novel and effective approach for predicting the fracture behavior of HPFRC under high-strain-rate conditions.