Moment capacity, Cracking Behaviour and Ductile Properties of Reinforced Concrete Beams using Steel Slag as a Coarse aggregate

α
Dr. Arivalagan. S
Dr. Arivalagan. S
σ
Dr.Arivalagan. S
Dr.Arivalagan. S
α Dr. M.G.R. Educational and Research Institute

Send Message

To: Author

Moment capacity, Cracking Behaviour and Ductile Properties of Reinforced Concrete Beams using Steel Slag as a Coarse aggregate

Article Fingerprint

ReserarchID

O9B2N

Moment capacity, Cracking Behaviour and Ductile Properties of Reinforced Concrete Beams using Steel Slag as a Coarse aggregate Banner

AI TAKEAWAY

Connecting with the Eternal Ground
  • English
  • Afrikaans
  • Albanian
  • Amharic
  • Arabic
  • Armenian
  • Azerbaijani
  • Basque
  • Belarusian
  • Bengali
  • Bosnian
  • Bulgarian
  • Catalan
  • Cebuano
  • Chichewa
  • Chinese (Simplified)
  • Chinese (Traditional)
  • Corsican
  • Croatian
  • Czech
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • Esperanto
  • Estonian
  • Filipino
  • Finnish
  • French
  • Frisian
  • Galician
  • Georgian
  • German
  • Greek
  • Gujarati
  • Haitian Creole
  • Hausa
  • Hawaiian
  • Hebrew
  • Hindi
  • Hmong
  • Hungarian
  • Icelandic
  • Igbo
  • Indonesian
  • Irish
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Javanese
  • Kannada
  • Kazakh
  • Khmer
  • Korean
  • Kurdish (Kurmanji)
  • Kyrgyz
  • Lao
  • Latin
  • Latvian
  • Lithuanian
  • Luxembourgish
  • Macedonian
  • Malagasy
  • Malay
  • Malayalam
  • Maltese
  • Maori
  • Marathi
  • Mongolian
  • Myanmar (Burmese)
  • Nepali
  • Norwegian
  • Pashto
  • Persian
  • Polish
  • Portuguese
  • Punjabi
  • Romanian
  • Russian
  • Samoan
  • Scots Gaelic
  • Serbian
  • Sesotho
  • Shona
  • Sindhi
  • Sinhala
  • Slovak
  • Slovenian
  • Somali
  • Spanish
  • Sundanese
  • Swahili
  • Swedish
  • Tajik
  • Tamil
  • Telugu
  • Thai
  • Turkish
  • Ukrainian
  • Urdu
  • Uzbek
  • Vietnamese
  • Welsh
  • Xhosa
  • Yiddish
  • Yoruba
  • Zulu

Abstract

This research paper outlines the method of preparation, testing procedure and salient results on the eco-friendly concrete that is manufactured using the waste products of steel industries. Results of eight flexural behaviour of Steel slag concrete beams and thier comparison with normal weight concrete (NWC) with reinforcement and without reinforcements are presented and discussed .The concrete is of grade 20 and the reinforced concrete beams of size 150 mm x 150 mm x 900 mm were prepared to study the structural behaviour. Similar grade concrete using NWC were also prepared and reinforced. It has been observed from the experimental investigation of the beams, that the moment capacity of SSRC beams was higher than NWC beams . In addition, the mode of failure observed in SSRC was ductile compared to the brittle failure of NWC beams. Thus, the SSRC beams showed a ductile failure, giving amble warning before failure happened. SSRC beams also exhibited a lot of cracking thus the crack width and crack spacing was small. The other advantage for SSRC beams was deflection. The SSRC beams exhibited higher deflection under constant load until failure, compared to NWC beams that failed in brittle manner without warning.

References

8 Cites in Article
  1. S Ashoor (2000). Effect of compressive strength and tensile reinforcement of flexural behviour of highstrength concrete beams.
  2. Md Delsye C L,Kurian Abdul Mannan,John (2006). Flexural Behaviour of Reinforecd Lightweight Concrete Beams Made with Oil Palm Shell.
  3. N Ganesan,P Indira,R Abraham (2007). Behaviour of Steel Fibre ReinforcedHigh Performance Concrete Members under Flexure.
  4. Faissal Hisham,Ibrahim (2009). Use of low CaO unprocessed steel slag in concrete as fine aggregate.
  5. Johnson Alengaram,U Mohd,Zamin Jumaat,Mahmud Hilmi (2008). Ductility Behaviour of Reinforced Palm Kernel Shell Concrete Beams.
  6. Falak Khidhair,Mohammed (2009). Using of Steel Slag in Modification of Concrete properties.
  7. H Matsunaga,F Kogiku,M Takagi,K Tanishiki (2003). Development of Environment-friendly Block Made of Steel Slag.
  8. V Ramakrishnan,G Oberling,P Tatnall (1987). Flexural Fatigue Strength of Steel Fiber Reinforced Concrete.Fibre Reinforced Concrete-Properties and Applications.

Funding

No external funding was declared for this work.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval

No ethics committee approval was required for this article type.

Data Availability

Not applicable for this article.

How to Cite This Article

Dr. Arivalagan. S. 2012. \u201cMoment capacity, Cracking Behaviour and Ductile Properties of Reinforced Concrete Beams using Steel Slag as a Coarse aggregate\u201d. Global Journal of Research in Engineering - E: Civil & Structural GJRE-E Volume 12 (GJRE Volume 12 Issue E2): .

Download Citation

Journal Specifications

Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/gjre

Print ISSN 0975-5861

e-ISSN 2249-4596

Version of record

v1.2

Issue date

February 17, 2012

Language
en
Experiance in AR

Explore published articles in an immersive Augmented Reality environment. Our platform converts research papers into interactive 3D books, allowing readers to view and interact with content using AR and VR compatible devices.

Read in 3D

Your published article is automatically converted into a realistic 3D book. Flip through pages and read research papers in a more engaging and interactive format.

Article Matrices
Total Views: 5502
Total Downloads: 2844
2026 Trends
Related Research

Published Article

This research paper outlines the method of preparation, testing procedure and salient results on the eco-friendly concrete that is manufactured using the waste products of steel industries. Results of eight flexural behaviour of Steel slag concrete beams and thier comparison with normal weight concrete (NWC) with reinforcement and without reinforcements are presented and discussed .The concrete is of grade 20 and the reinforced concrete beams of size 150 mm x 150 mm x 900 mm were prepared to study the structural behaviour. Similar grade concrete using NWC were also prepared and reinforced. It has been observed from the experimental investigation of the beams, that the moment capacity of SSRC beams was higher than NWC beams . In addition, the mode of failure observed in SSRC was ductile compared to the brittle failure of NWC beams. Thus, the SSRC beams showed a ductile failure, giving amble warning before failure happened. SSRC beams also exhibited a lot of cracking thus the crack width and crack spacing was small. The other advantage for SSRC beams was deflection. The SSRC beams exhibited higher deflection under constant load until failure, compared to NWC beams that failed in brittle manner without warning.

Our website is actively being updated, and changes may occur frequently. Please clear your browser cache if needed. For feedback or error reporting, please email [email protected]

Request Access

Please fill out the form below to request access to this research paper. Your request will be reviewed by the editorial or author team.
X

Quote and Order Details

Contact Person

Invoice Address

Notes or Comments

This is the heading

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

High-quality academic research articles on global topics and journals.

Moment capacity, Cracking Behaviour and Ductile Properties of Reinforced Concrete Beams using Steel Slag as a Coarse aggregate

Dr.Arivalagan. S
Dr.Arivalagan. S

Research Journals