City
Epaper

IIT Hyderabad develops low-cost ultra-high performance fiber reinforced concrete for bridges

By IANS | Updated: November 5, 2022 00:00 IST

Hyderabad, Nov 4 Using locally available materials like cement, fly-ash, river sand, ground granulated blast furnace slag, micro-silica, ...

Open in App

Hyderabad, Nov 4 Using locally available materials like cement, fly-ash, river sand, ground granulated blast furnace slag, micro-silica, water, steel fiber, polypropylene fibers and high range water reducing agent (HRWRA), a team of researchers at IIT Hyderabad (IIT-H) has successfully developed an affordable special ultra-high performance fiber reinforced concrete (UHPFRC).

The cost of UHPFRC developed at IIT-H is about two times cheaper than commercially available proprietary products, a release said on Friday.

Prof. S. Suriya Prakash, CASTCON Lab, Department of Civil Engineering and his research group at IIT-H, brought down costs by reducing the quantity of cement, fibers and replacing costly fine aggregates with cheaper locally available ones through proper gradation.

The composition combines the best features of self-consolidating concrete (SCC), fiber-reinforced concrete (FRC) and high-performance concrete (HPC).

UHPFRC, developed at IITH for pre-stressing applications, yields a cube compressive strength of 150 MPa and a direct tensile strength of 8.0 MPa.

Several full-scale post-tensioned UHPFRC concrete bridge girders were tested to understand the shear behaviour.

Test results show that providing a minimum web shear reinforcement ratio and adequate steel fiber dosage leads to better serviceability, ultimate strength, and stiffness of bridge girders.

The overall cost of UHPFRC girders in bridge applications can be further reduced by providing the minimum web-shear reinforcement of 0.6 per cent and a hybrid fiber volume dosage of about 1 per cent.

Prof S. Suriya Prakash, CASTCON Lab, IIT-H, said: "Several full-scale bridge girders made of UHPFRC were tested. Our test results have given deeper insights into the shear behaviour of pre-stressed bridge girders, which will be used to develop design guidelines for practising engineers. Our research is expected to increase the confidence in using UHPFRC in India for various infrastructure applications."

Prof B.S. Murty, Director, IITH, said: "Strong and durable infrastructure is a must for holistic development of any nation. Developing construction materials with improved strength using locally available raw materials is a creditable stride towards realising our dream of AatmaNirbhar Bharat. I am sure such innovation will not only benefit local development in terms of economic & efficient infrastructure but extend its advantage to the infrastructure sector globally."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: UhpfrcDepartment of civil engineeringindiaHyderabadNagarHyderIndiUk-indiaRepublic of indiaIndia indiaGia indiaBhagyanagar
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiUniversity of Bristol Chooses Mumbai for Its First Overseas Campus, Set to Open in September 2026

NationalRaksha Bandhan 2025: Now You Can Send a Rakhi to Your Brother in India Post's Waterproof Envelope — Here's How to Track Your Parcel

NationalGold in Dubai Cheaper Than India: Pricing, Rules, and Import Limits Explained

NationalHyderabad Tragedy: 23-Year-Old Man Dies by Suicide After Losing Rs 5 Lakh in Online Ludo Game

NationalIndia Spends ₹1.38 Lakh Crore Annually on Edible Oil Imports

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyChatGPT may face capacity crunches ahead of GPT-5 launch: Sam Altman

TechnologyCentre-State partnership must to attract investment and industrialisation: Top official

TechnologyFPIs offload Rs 17,741 crore in July, trend may reverse after trade tensions wane

TechnologyTraders should wait and watch as derivatives data show indecisiveness

TechnologyForeign buying of S. Korean stocks hits 17-month high in July