Fiber Reinforced Concrete Peoria IL

Over the last few decades, material scientists in Peoria have improved concrete mix designs using technology that has increased strength, durability, placing, and improved environmental aspects. Perhaps the brittle nature of concrete is the last technological barrier to attack.

C & H REPAIR & SUPPLY
(309) 676-3333
2313-15 SW Adams St Peoria, IL, 61602
Peoria, IL
Kmart 9335 / Cross Merch
(309) 682-0350
901 W Lake Ave
Peoria, IL
Sutherland Ace Hardware
(309) 694-3465
2244 E Washington St
East Peoria, IL
BUILDERS CASH & CARRY
(309) 699-3959
300 S. MAIN STREET EAST PEORIA, IL, 61611
East Peoria, IL
Builders True Value
(309) 699-3959
300 S Main St
East Peoria, IL
Northwoods Mall
(309) 681-3100
2200 W War Memorial Dr Ste998
Peoria, IL
Ehrett's Hardware
309-699-9422
201 Rusche Street
Creve Coeur, IL
Ace Hardware
(309) 637-4345
2504 W Rohmann Ave
West Peoria, IL
ABC Supply Co.,Inc/East Peoria
309-694-3600
601 N Main St East Peoria, IL, 61611
East Peoria, IL
Nena Do it Best Hardware
309-688-9700
1415 Forrest Hill
Peoria, IL

Fiber Reinforced Concrete

Source: CONCRETE PRODUCER MAGAZINE
Publication date: November 1, 2006

By Victor C. Li

Over the last few decades, material scientists have improved concrete mix designs using technology that has increased strength, durability, placing, and improved environmental aspects. Perhaps the brittle nature of concrete is the last technological barrier to attack.

Ever since concrete was made by the Romans 2000 years ago, it has been known for this brittleness. Concrete's brittleness has at times been responsible for catastrophic failures of structures, but more often results in a gradual deterioration that requires repeated and costly repairs. Many attempts have been made to modify concrete so it can take tensile load. Today, the most effective modification has been the introduction of fibers, typically made of steel, glass, or polymer, resulting in fiber-reinforced concrete.

It has been a dream of concrete engineers to produce a concrete that retains the beneficial properties of conventional concrete, such as high compressive strength and non-rusting. Yet at the same time, the final product should possess the tensile ductility of steel so yielding, instead of fracturing, occurs when the concrete is overloaded.

It's true that this design feature can be achieved with fiber reinforcement. However, the past strategy has been to use a lot of fibers (more than 5% in volume), often in aligned or fabric form.

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