Influence of FRP Composites Strengthening Configurations
on In-plane Failure of Brick Masonry Walls
Sanaa El Malyh
1a
, Azzeddine Bouyahyaoui
1b
and Toufik Cherradi
1c
1
Mohammadia School of Engineer, Mohammed V University of Rabat, Morocco
Department of Civil Engineering,
Keywords: Carbon fiber reinforced polymer, debonding, masonry, strengthening, composite materials.
Abstract: A high percentage of unreinforced load bearing masonry structures exist in many countries, these structures
shown to be vulnerable to earthquakes, and exhibited important damages. The failure of each element of
structure generates a problem in the load transmission. The seismic evaluation of unreinforced masonry walls
is a complicated task, however, several research investigates the ability of reducing their seismic risk and
ameliorates their mechanical characteristics by using different materials. The carbon fiber-reinforced polymer
(CFRP) composites were used in numerous investigations to reinforce masonry walls, it offers significant
advantages since the fibers can be externally bonded to the surface without affecting the aesthetics of the
structure, and it could improve the strength of the structure. As part of this research, an experimental study
was conducted to investigate the seismic behavior of masonry walls reinforced with unidirectional CFRP
composites and subjected to in-plane loading. This paper evaluates the in-plane behavior of two groups of
masonry walls strengthened with diverse percentage and orientations of CFRP composites.
1 INTRODUCTION
The damage caused by past earthquakes showed the
seismic vulnerability of existing unreinforced
masonry structures. The percentage of masonry
buildings was estimated to be over 70% of the world’s
building inventory (Matthys and Noland, 1989).
Moderate earthquakes could lead to significant human
and material losses caused in the most cases by the
masonry elements.
Several research studies highlighted the need for
developping different effective techniques to enhance
the seismic loading, the strength and the ductility of
unreinforced walls with minimum impact on the
aesthetics of the structure. Actually, repairing
structures doesn’t present just a technical challenge,
but also an economical challenge that depends on the
repairing conditions and the type of damages (cracks,
reinforcement of load-bearing elements, etc.). Within
the available systems is the organic matrix composite
materials. The use of composite materials in recent
years, continually been enhanced because of its
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1091-0513
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3235-9777
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4655-8419
multiple advantages and specifically for its
weightlessness that does not influence the weight of
the structure, its rigidities, durability and its significant
resistances. Composite materials have low fatigue and
sensitivity, their use improve the performance of the
structures and present a high stiffness-resistance ratio
while keeping the initial appearance of the structures
(Mosallam et al, 2014). Taking into consideration the
mechanical characteristics of the elements
constituting the FRP composites, specifically the type
of fibers and their orientation, the matrix and the
interface between them, influence directly the
behavior of the composite laminate. Several studies
have been carried out to understand the FRP behavior
and to determine the deformations and the failure
modes of different types of structures subjected to
cyclic loading, in order to predict the appropriate
reinforcement system.The analysis of the work and
results related to the behavior of the reinforced infill
panels will be discussed. Different strengthening
technique were studied in the literature (ElGawady et
al, 2004; Chuang and Zhuge, 2005) to repair or to
reinforce masonry walls using several products such
as: reinforced plaster, projected concrete, ferrocement,
injection of epoxy into voids or cracks, the addition of
steel reinforcement injected into the voids drilled
vertically through the mid-thickness of the wall,
exterior reinforcement of the masonry with steel plates
or tubes, confinement of the masonry, reinforced
concrete columns and beams, post-tensioning of the
wall with steel tendons. These techniques are
effective, but they have several disadvantages such as
their expensive prices, and they present a significant
load and influence the aesthetics of the structure.
Textile reinforced cement matrix is widely used
for reinforcing different masonry and concrete
elements. Several studies evaluated the use of TRC
for the reinforcement of reinforced concrete elements
and especially for column confinement to improve
their resistance to compression loads (Ortlepp et al,
2009) and torsion, for reinforcing beams and slabs
subjected to shear and bending (Brückner et al, 2006).
Recycled or artificial aggregate composite
materials of agricultural or industrial origin have been
the subject of numerous studies carried out to
determine the mechanical characteristics of
composites contain renewable materials incorporated
in a cement mortar matrix or concrete. These
materials can be in the form of fibers, particles or
aggregates from agricultural residues of vegetable
origin (jute, palm trees, etc.) that sometimes require
physical or chemical treatment before their use or
both in some cases. Their mechanical characterization
presents the subject of numerous publications (e.g.
Boghossian et al, 2008; Mir et al, 2010; Kriker et al,
2005).
FRP composite laminates are designed to enhance
both strength and ductility of masonry walls. Polymer
composites strengthening can be applied either
externally or using near surface-mounted (NSM)
technique. NSM method has several advantages such
as it doesn’t influence the aesthetic of the structure and
it ensures the fiber protection against fire.
External bonding composites is one of the most
widely used reinforcement methods to repair or to
reinforce different types of structures in order to
improve their mechanical performance. The fabrics
are dry or pre-impregnated with a polymeric matrix,
and for the plate they are glued with the epoxy resin
(Khalifa et al, 1998). By definition the external
bonding is the method by which the FRP laminates
are bonded to the surface of a wall using two-part of
the epoxy adhesive. Prior to FRP application, the wall
surface is cleaned and a fill layer is applied to create
a flat surface to which the FRP will be bonded
(Stratford et al, 2004). External reinforcement with
FRP can be partial by using strips or total by applying
reinforcement to the entire surface of the walls
(Mosallam and Banerjee, 2011).
The efficiency of the reinforcement depends on its
laminate orientation, type of fibers and matrix, as well
as the number of plies. For Valluzzi et al, (2002), the
shear strength of the walls reinforced by diagonal
reinforcement is higher than the orthogonal mesh
reinforcement. On the other hand, results described in
(Santa-Maria et al, 2004) showed that the shear
behavior of masonry walls reinforced by CFRP plates
is influenced by their orientations, the strength results
of walls with diagonal reinforcement has increased
considerably compared to the horizontal
reinforcement.
Konthesingha et al, (2013) tested the repaired
damaged masonry walls reinforced by near surface
mounted (NSM) CFRP plate in three configurations;
namely: horizontal reinforcement of one side,
horizontal reinforcement on both sides, and cross-ply
reinforcements on both sides of the wall. Their results
indicated that wall specimen externally reinforced by
horizontal and vertical system had the highest energy
dissipation, strength and deformation capacities.
2 SPECIMEN PREPARATION
In this study, wall specimens with dimension of
1200X1200X115mm were constructed using clay
brick units of 240X115X63mm. The mortar thickness
used in building wall specimens is 10 mm, 28 days
later and before applying the composites, the
substrate surfaces were cleaned by high air pressure.
Then, the substrates were wet by water then it was
covered by a thin layer of epoxy primer followed
immediately by the application of mortar with
thickness of 12mm, after it hardened, the first layer of
resin was applied to bond the composite, then a
second layer of epoxy polymer is applied to fix and to
protect the composite. During these operations, it is
necessary to ensure that the composite was well
impregnated with resin. The walls were reinforced
using different configurations of the unidirectional
carbon fibers reinforced polymer. The CFRP were
applied on the front and back sides of each wall. After
seven days, the specimens were tested under in-plane
loadings. Then the in-plane performance of the
masonry elements to failure were experimentally
evaluated. In-plane tests were performed in two
groups of the specimens (refer to Table 1 and data
used in (Elmalyh et al, 2020).
3 TEST PROTOCOL
After the specimens were prepared, they were tested
according to (ASTM E519, 2002), first the wall was
fixed between two steel shoes to permit the
transmission of the load machine (see Figure 1). Then
the linear variable differential transducers (LVDTs)
were attached on the both diagonals to measure the
displacements and the deformations in the both
directions. The load was applied at the top corner in
the gravity direction by hydraulic actuator fixed to the
supporting frame.
4 RESULTS AND COMPARISON
The performance of the composite materials depends
mainly on the characteristics of the interface between
the fibers and the matrix. The interface ensures the
transfer of the applied load from the matrix to the
reinforcement system. Various studies and analyses
evaluated the influence of the type and thickness of
the interface on the composite properties.
Wall subjected to compressive loads incur a
regular loss of rigidity which is compensated by the
presence of the composite that absorbs energy and
increase deformability and failure load of the wall.
However, the energy dissipation depends also on the
reinforcement configuration. The strengthening ratio
details of the first and the second group are illustrated
in the table 1. Experimental data presented in
the table 2 is compared to evaluate the performance
of the strengthening configuration in improving the
behavior of URM wall under in-plane compressive
loading. It should be highlighted that all the CFRP
composite reinforcement configurations evaluated in
this study were effective in improving the integrity
and the load bearing capacity of the masonry walls.
Comparing failure of unreinforced wall with the
reinforced specimens, the URM specimen exhibited
rapid crack propagation, indeed in all cases the
response of the reinforced walls had high strength and
the crack propagation was obstructed by the CFRP
caused by the shear tensile transmitted via the
masonry-CFRP interface.
Regarding the experimental results illustrated in
the figure 1, 2 and 3, all the strengthened walls
showed similar failure modes (shear failure at the
ends of the vertical diagonal, delamination of the
CFRP and compression failure of masonry).
Nevertheless, for wall specimen reinforced with one
diagonal composite strip at each side (W-1D-CFRP),
the failure mode was similar to unreinforced wall.
The tensile resistance of the compressive loads was
higher than the URM wall by 59.56%, even if the
diagonal reinforcement presented 41% of each side.
From the results obtained from this study, it is
clearly seen that the walls W-CFRP-W1,
W-3D-CFRP, W-2DX-2V-CFRP had the highest
shear strength, which correspond to the following
load bearing capacities 32.3 kN and 37.8 kN. Despite
the amount of composites applied to specimen
W-3D-CFRP which is 47% lesser than the specimen
W-CFRP-W1 that was fully reinforced on its both
sides. It seems that applying just 53% of composites
per side provided a higher flexible response and the
most important lateral deformations. Nevertheless,
the lateral deformations for the specimen
W-CFRP-W1 had significantly increased too.
Table 1: Retrofit details applied on each side
Desi
g
nation Ratio (%) Confi
g
uration CFRP
(
mm
)
Grou
p
e N°1
W-CFRP-W1 100 Full face
1200X1200
W-CFRP-W2 50 3 Vertical
200X1200
W-CFRP-W3 75
3Verticals &
3 horizontals
6X200X1200
Groupe N°2
W-1D-CFRP
41 One diagonal 350
W-3D-CFRP 53
Three parallel
diagonals
300
& 2X200
W-2DX-CFRP 74 Diagonal X
2X350
W-2DX-2V-
CFRP
90
Two verticals
& dia
g
onal X
2X350
& 2X200
* URM-W-CFRP-W-X-: URM: unreinforced masonry, W: wall,
CFRP-W: carbon fiber reinforced polymer, W: wrap, X: number
of walls.
Comparing the specimen W-CFRP-W3
(reinforced by three verticals and three horizontals
CFRP (cross play composites) that covered 75% of
each substrate) with W-2DX-CFRP (reinforced by
two perpendicular diagonal CFRP applied on 74% of
each substrate), their response and their load bearing
capacities, which correspond to 26.2 kN, 27.4 kN
were almost similar.
Experimental results indicated that wall specimen
W-2DX-2V-CFRP, with CFRP composites covering
90% of each wall side, has the highest load bearing
capacity of 39 kN. The behavior of this wall specimen
is similar to W- CFRP-W 1 specimen.
The strengthening ratio used in those two cases
enhanced the tensile strength of the retrofitted walls,
which developed a larger strain that leads to high
lateral deformations.
Shear crack formation along the diagonal and the delamination of CFRP (Group N°1)
Wall shear cracking (Group N°2) CFRP delamination and the wall shear cracking (Group N°2)
Figure 1: Failure mode of the tested walls
Figure 2: Shear Stress-Strain curves of the tested walls (Group N°1)
Fi
g
ure 3: Shear Stress-Strain curves of the tested walls
(
Grou
p
N°2
)
5 CONCLUSION
The in-plane behaviour URM walls strengthened with
external CFRP composites was tested to evaluate the
effectiveness of using different configuration. The
following conclusions can be drawn:
The retrofitted walls load bearing capacities has
known an increase from 26.2 kN to 32.3 kN compared
to the reference wall. Specimens reinforced with three
parallel and vertical CFRP strips (50% reinforcement
ratio) indicated a significant enhancement in ductility
and deformability, despite the small amount of CFRP
used for reinforcement.
This study showed that the vertical and/or
horizontal reinforcement system increased the safety
of structures during an earthquake by improving
strength, energy dissipation and the ductility of the
URM walls. For example, the strength of the first
group was experimentally observed to be 181.72% to
247.31% higher than the URM wall. By using three
Table 2: Results of diagonal compression tests
Configuration
type
Side N° Load (kN) ΔV
(mm) ΔH
(mm)
Shear stress
(N/mm²)
Shear strain
(mm/mm)
Modulus of
Rigidity (MPa)
W- CFRP-W 1
1
32.3
1.2 0.18
0.17
0.0028
60.71
2
4.83 0.37 0.01
17.00
W- CFRP-W 2
1
29.4
1.03 0.15
0.15
0.0023 65.22
2 1.90 1 0.0058
25.86
W- CFRP-W 3
1
26.2
1.02 0.7
0.13
0.0034
38.24
2
1.46 3.02 0.009
14.44
W- 1D-CFRP
1
23
0.273 0.51
0.12
0.0016 75.25
2 0.467 0.887 0.0027 43.51
W- 3D-CFRP
1
37.8
1.592 7.188
0.194
0.0176 11.03
2 1.219 5.751 0.0139 13.89
W-2DX-CFRP
1
27.4
1.141 0.571
0.1404
0.0034 41
2 0.884 3.359 0.0085 16.54
W-2DX-2V-CFR
P
1
39
2.05 0.493
0.1998
0.0051 39.30
2 2.263 0.989 0.0065 30.72
vertical CFRP strips, the strength of the externally
reinforced wall significantly improved with a gain of
216.13% as compared to the reference unreinforced
wall specimen.
The ultimate strength of all wall specimens with
diagonal reinforcement configurations significantly
increased by 2.5 to 4.2 times the capacity of the
corresponding unreinforced wall specimens. In
addition, the shear strength of the wall specimens
increased considerably by 319%. The ultimate
strength of the walls strengthened with the second
reinforcement scheme group is 147.31 to 319.35%
higher than that of the unreinforced specimens.
CFRP reinforcement configuration with two
perpendicular diagonal strips and parallel vertical
strips applied on each side reached the highest in-
plane shear strength. Results also indicated that the
configuration with three parallel diagonal CFRP
strips is the optimum reinforcement ratio that
improves the in-plane response of the wall with
minimum cost. For example, the strength gain
obtained from this specimen with 53% CFRP
reinforcement ratio is 306% as compared to the
unreinforced wall specimen.
The model reinforced by a single diagonal CFRP
composite applied on each side showed a less
strength. The wall strength degrades quickly and the
reinforcement did not show a remarkable decrease in
rigidity. On the other hand, the wall rigidity
deteriorates rapidly, and it was accompanied by large
deformations, which provide the wall failure at a low
load of 23 kN. The strength of the wall reinforced
with diagonal stripes is the lowest compared to the
other configurations.
Experimental comparisons of the performance of
CFRP strengthening systems demonstrate that the
strength of the reinforced wall depends on the
percentage, the orientation and the position of the
CFRP reinforcement.
The results of this study confirmed the ability of
CFRP reinforcement in improving the mechanical
behavior of URM walls. The diagonal composite
reinforcement scheme presents a high potential
strengthening alternative as compared to full-surface
reinforcement scheme.
REFERENCES
Matthys, H., and Noland, L., 1989, proceedings of an
international seminar on Evaluation, strengtheningand
retrofitting masonry buildings, TMS, Colorado, USA.
Mosallam, A.S., Bayraktar, A., Elmikawi, M., Pul, S., and
Adanur, S., Polymer Composites in Construction: An
Overview, SOJ Materials Science & Engineering, 2(1),
25, 2014.
ElGawady, M., Lestuzzi, P., Badoux, M., A review of
conventional seismic retrofitting techniques for URM,
In: proceedings of 13th international brick and block
masonry conference. Amsterdam, July 4-7, 2004.
Chuang, S. W., and Zhuge, Y., Seismic Retrofitting of
Unreinforced Masonry Buildings - A Literature
Review, Australian Journal of Structural Engineering,
6 (1), 25-36, 2005.
Ortlepp, R., Lorenz, A., Curbach, M., Column
Strengthening with TRC: Influences of the Column
Geometry onto the Confinement Effect, Advances in
Materials Science and Engineering, 2009.
Brückner, A., Ortlepp, R., Curbach, M., Textile reinforced
concrete for strengthening in bending and Shear,
Materials and Structures, 39 (8), 741-748, 2006.
Boghossian, E., Leon, D., Wegner, R., Use of flax fibres to
reduce plastic shrinkage cracking in concrete, Cement
and Concrete Composites, 30, 929-937, 2008.
Mir, A., Zitouni, R., Colombet, F., Bezzazi, B., Study of
Mechanical and thermomechanical properties of
jute/epoxy Composite Laminate, Journal of reinforced
plastics and composites, 29 (11), 1669-.1680,2010.
Kriker, A., Debicki, G., Bali, A., Khenfer, M.M.,
Chabannet, M. , Mechanical properties of date palm
fibres and concrete reinforced with date palm fibres in
hot-dry climate, Cement & Concrete Composites, 27,
554-564, 2005.
Khalifa, A., Gold, W., Nanni, A., Abdel Aziz, M. I.,
Contribution of externally bonded FRP to shear
capacity of flexural members, 2(4), pp.195-203, 1998.
Stratford, T., Pascale, G., Manfroni, O., Bonfiglioli, B.,
Shear strengthening masonry panels with sheet glass-
fiber reinforced polymer, Journal of Composites for
Construction, 8(5), 434-443, 2004.
Mosallam, A., Banerjee, S., Enhancement in in-plane shear
capacity of unreinforced masonry (URM) walls
strengthened with fiber reinforced polymer composites
Composites, 42 (6), 1657-1670, 2011.
Valluzzi, M.R., Tinazzi, D., Modena, C., Shear behavior of
masonry panels strengthened by FRP laminates,
Construction and Building Materials,16 (7),409-416,
2002.
Santa-Maria, H., Duarte, G., Duarte, A., Garib, A.,
Experimental Investigation of masonry panels
externally strengthened with CFRP laminates and
fabric subjected to in-plane shear load, 13th World
Conference on Earthquake Engineering Vancouver,
B.C., Canada, No. 1627, August 1-6, 2004.
Konthesingha, K.M.C., Masia, M.J., Petersen, R.B.,
Mojsilovic, N., Simundic, G., Page, A.W., Static cyclic
in-plane shear response of damaged masonry walls
retrofitted with NSM FRP strips – An experimental
evaluation, Engineering Structures, 50, 126– 136, 2013.
ElMalyh, S., Bouyahyaouo, A., Cherradi, T., Rotaru, A.,
Mihai, P., Shear Strength of Unreinforced Masonry
Walls Retrofitted with CFRP, Advances in Science,
Technology and Engineering Systems Journal, 5 (2),
351-359, 2020.