Materials, Vol. 18, Pages 5358: Assessment of Relationship Between Temperature and Selected Technical Parameters of High-Strength, Fine-Grained Ordinary and Polypropylene Fibre-Modified Building Mortars Subjected to Conditions Simulating Fire


Materials, Vol. 18, Pages 5358: Assessment of Relationship Between Temperature and Selected Technical Parameters of High-Strength, Fine-Grained Ordinary and Polypropylene Fibre-Modified Building Mortars Subjected to Conditions Simulating Fire

Materials doi: 10.3390/ma18235358

Authors:
Tomasz Drzymała
Bartosz Zegardło
Krzysztof Przystupa

Cement composites are non-flammable, and their resistance to high temperatures is only apparent. This article presents extensive research on the strength parameters of building mortars exposed to fire-simulating conditions. The analyses included assessment of the mortars’ tensile, compressive and flexural strength, as well as their flexural modulus of elasticity. Microscopic analysis of the samples was performed using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). The results of optimisation studies, particularly tensile strength tests conducted for various types of additives (fibres), showed that the addition of polypropylene fibres had a beneficial effect across the entire temperature range. Based on the research, relationships between temperature and the tested parameters were developed. Polynomial models were applied for their approximation, with the selection justified both by the high consistency with the experimental results and by the nature of the physical changes occurring in the cement mortar during subsequent stages of heating. These models allow an approximate assessment of the condition of mortar after a fire. Based on the conducted microstructural analyses of mortars and their correlation with the strength test results, graphical models were presented to illustrate the phenomena governing the changes in the examined parameters at various fire temperatures. On the basis of conclusions drawn from the analyses, recommendations were formulated regarding the use of polypropylene fibres in selected structural elements that may be exposed to fire, and the limitations of their applicability were indicated.



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