Muzammil (20s45a0147) FRC
Muzammil (20s45a0147) FRC
Muzammil (20s45a0147) FRC
Prepared by –
MOHAMMED MUZAMMIL AHMED
20S45A0147
The use of fibers goes back at least 3500 years, when straw was used to
reinforce sun-baked bricks in Mesopotamia.
Horsehair was used in mortar and straw in mud bricks.
Abestos fibers were used in concrete in the early 1900.
In the 1950s, the concept of composite materials came
into picture.
Steel , Glass and synthetic fibers have been used to improve the properties of
concrete for the past 30 or 40 years.
Research into new fiber-reinforced concretes continues even today.
Introduction…
Used in formwork, swimming pools, ducts and roofs, sewer lining etc.
Synthetic fibers…
Man- made fibers from petrochemical and textile industries.
Volume of fibers
Orientation of fiber
Agriculture
It is used in animal storage structures, walls, silos, paving, etc.
Warehouse / Industrial
It is used in light to heavy duty loaded floors.
Residential
It includes application in driveways, sidewalks, pool construction,
basements, colored concrete, foundations, drainage, etc.
Fiber Reinforced Concrete Normal Reinforced
concrete
• High Durability • Lower Durability
• Protect steel from • Steel potential to corrosion
Corrosion
• Heavier material
• Lighter materials
• Economical
• More expensive
• With the same volume,
• With the same volume, the strength is less
the strength is greater
• High workability as
• Less workability compared to FRC.
Application of FRC in India & Abroad…
More than 400 tones of Steel Fibers have been used in the construction of
a road overlay for a project at Mathura (UP).
A 3.9 km long district heating tunnel, caring heating pipelines from a
power plant on the island Amager into the center of Copenhagen, is lined
with SFC segments without any conventional steel bar reinforcement.
Steel fibers are used without rebars to carry flexural loads at a parking
garage at Heathrow Airport. It is a structure with 10 cm thick slab.
Precast fiber reinforced concrete manhole covers and frames are being
widely used in India.
Pavement with steel fibre reinforced concrete
Increase in compressive strength of concrete:
The total energy absorbed in fiber as measured by the area under the load-
deflection curve is at least 10 to 40 times higher for fiber-reinforced
concrete than that of plain concrete.
Addition of fiber to conventionally reinforced beams increased
the fatigue life and decreased the crack width under fatigue loading.
At elevated temperature SFRC have more strength both in
compression and tension.
Cost savings of 10% - 30% over conventional concrete flooring systems.