Abstract
This article investigates the shear behavior of deep concrete beams reinforced with glass fiber reinforced polymer for flexure and without shear reinforcement. A total of 13 beams were tested under four-point loading until failure. Nine of which reinforced with glass fiber reinforced polymer bars and four with steel bars. The ultimate shear capacity along with the load–deformation relationship of all beams was studied. The effects of the shear span to depth ratio a/d, reinforcement ratio ρ, beam effective depth d, and concrete compressive strength on the ultimate shear capacity and mode of failure of all beams were also investigated. Results show that the stiffness of steel-reinforced concrete beams (slope of the ascending portion of load–deflection curve) is higher than that of beams reinforced with fiber-reinforced polymer bars as expected, due to the low axial stiffness of the fiber-reinforced polymer material. A slight variation in the ultimate shear capacity was noticed but no clear trend was observed. In addition, beams reinforced with fiber-reinforced polymer exhibited larger deformation at their ultimate failure load, after which a sudden failure occurred especially for beams having high shear capacity.
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