Recieved:

06/02/2026

Accepted:

26/04/2026

Page: 

doi:

http://dx.doi.org/10.17515/resm2026-1494me0206rs

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5

Shear behavior and failure mechanisms of steel fiber reinforced concrete beams incorporating silica fume: Experimental investigation with SEM–EDX based microstructural influence on structural response

Chakala Harsha Vardhan1, Durga Chaitanya Kumar Jagarapu1, D V S K Chaitanya2, B.P.R.V.S.Priyatham 3, B Dileep Kumar Reddy4

1Department of Civil Engineering, Koneru Lakshmaiah Education Foundation, Vaddeswaram, Guntur District, India
2Department of Civil Engineering, Acharya Nagarjuna University, Guntur District, India
3Department of Civil Engineering, GMR Institute of Technology (GMRIT) - Deemed to be University, Rajam, India
4Department of Civil Engineering, JNTUA College of Engineering, Pulivendula, YSR Kadapa District, India

Abstract

Shear failure in reinforced concrete beams is characterized by a sudden and brittle response posing significant risks to structural safety particularly in high-performance cementitious matrices. Although silica fume improves strength and durability it often reduces crack limit. This study addresses gap by establishing a direct equivalence between material-level interpretation and beam-scale shear behavior using concrete mixes containing 5% silica fume and steel fibers at volume fractions (Vf) of 0%, 0.75%, 1.0% and 1.25% were prepared among them 1.0% identified as optimum mix based on that an experimental program comprising cubes, cylinders and beam testing complemented by SEM-EDX microstructural analysis was conducted to investigate fiber-matrix interaction. Beam specimens were casted and tested under 4-point loading with a (a/d) ratio of 1.9 adapted limited transverse reinforcement to induce shear-critical behavior. Results indicate that RCSF0% fibers showed diagonal tension cracking leading to brittle shear failure within shear span. whereas, the RSCF1.0% mix demonstrated enhanced load capacity improved deformation resulting in a distinct shift from shear-dominated to flexure-controlled behavior. The findings further reveal that even with relatively larger stirrup spacing, steel fibers effectively bridged cracks at the microstructural level, enhancing shear resistance and improving the ductility and stability of the shear-critical structural members.

Keywords

Shear behavior; Fiber reinforced concrete; Crack pattern; Ductility; Steel fibers; Load-deflection response; a/d ratio; SEM-EDX analysis

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