Detail publikace

Effect of Alkaline Environment on Mechanical Properties of Molded Composite Reinforcement

LAGIŇ, J. GIRGLE, F. ČAIROVIĆ, I. KOSTIHA, V. ŠTĚPÁNEK, P.

Originální název

Effect of Alkaline Environment on Mechanical Properties of Molded Composite Reinforcement

Typ

článek ve sborníku ve WoS nebo Scopus

Jazyk

angličtina

Originální abstrakt

Composite (FRP) reinforcement is used in the construction industry mainly because of its high resistance to aggressive environments. The production technology and design of straight FRP members is now very well understood. However, when designing concrete elements, it is usually necessary to adapt the reinforcement to the requirements of the construction and to design curved (bent) members. These then undergo structural changes in their cross-section during manufacture, which can have a major effect on their service life and load-bearing capacity. This paper describes the problem of degradation of shaped composite reinforcement in an aggressive alkaline environment and presents experimentally determined values of tensile strength.

Klíčová slova

Composite Reinforcement, Bending, Bent Composite Reinforcement, Degradation, Alkali

Autoři

LAGIŇ, J.; GIRGLE, F.; ČAIROVIĆ, I.; KOSTIHA, V.; ŠTĚPÁNEK, P.

Vydáno

30. 8. 2022

Nakladatel

Trans Tech Publications Ltd

Místo

Switzerland

ISSN

1662-9779

Periodikum

Solid State Phenomena

Ročník

30.8.2022

Číslo

1

Stát

Švýcarská konfederace

Strany od

201

Strany do

208

Strany počet

8

URL

BibTex

@inproceedings{BUT179356,
  author="Juraj {Lagiň} and František {Girgle} and Iva {Čairović} and Vojtěch {Kostiha} and Petr {Štěpánek}",
  title="Effect of Alkaline Environment on Mechanical Properties of Molded Composite Reinforcement",
  booktitle="Solid State Phenomena (Vol. 336)",
  year="2022",
  journal="Solid State Phenomena",
  volume="30.8.2022",
  number="1",
  pages="201--208",
  publisher="Trans Tech Publications Ltd",
  address="Switzerland",
  doi="10.4028/p-mcz763",
  issn="1662-9779",
  url="https://www.scientific.net/SSP.336.201"
}