Potentials of Steel-Fibers for Mesh Mould Elements (2018-09)¶
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Contribution - Proceedings of the 1st RILEM International Conference on Concrete and Digital Fabrication, pp. 207-216
Abstract
Mesh Mould is a digital fabrication technique developed at ETH Zurich in which the reinforcement and formwork production are unified in a robotically controlled system. An industrial robot fabricates a dense, three-dimensional, double-sided, welded reinforcement mesh that is infilled with a special concrete mix that achieves sufficient compaction without flowing out the mesh, which acts as porous formwork. Since the project started in 2012, the actual generation of robot end-effector is capable of bending and welding conventional steel reinforcement of 6 and 4.5 mm in diameter. Due to the process, the load-bearing capacity of these Mesh Mould elements is not equal in both directions due to geometrical restrictions in the end-effector. This study aims to increase the load-bearing capacity in the weaker direction by using steel fibre reinforced concrete (SFRC), which orients the fibres during flowing in this direction and in addition prevents the leakage of the concrete by enhancing jamming. A total of 10 specimens with 540 × 210 × 80 mm dimensions were tested in a displacement controlled symmetric four-point bending test. By combining SFRC with a mesh, the bending strength increased significantly with respect to the samples without fibres. The capacity is higher than the capacity of the individual parts, which are evaluated in separate material tests. Nonetheless, the bending strength in this study was limited by the weld strength, which was considerably lower than the one achieved by the robot. Higher weld strength would lead to better performance than in this first study, which is a part of an ongoing research effort.
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Potential Benefits of Digital Fabrication for Complex Structures:
Environmental Assessment of a Robotically Fabricated Concrete Wall - Kumar Nitish, Hack Norman, Dörfler Kathrin, Walzer Alexander et al. (2017-06)
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Mechanical Behavior and Reinforcement Efficiency of 3D Printed Concrete Under Compression, Tension, and Bending - Isaac Geoff, Nicholas Paul, Paul Gavin, Pietroni Nico et al. (2024-02)
Automated Shotcrete:
A More Sustainable Construction Technology - Sedghi Reza, Rashidi Kourosh, Hojati Maryam (2024-01)
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From Concept to Reality - Lyu Fuyan, Zhao Dongliang, Hou Xiaohui, Sun Li et al. (2021-10)
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A Review - Hack Norman, Dörfler Kathrin, Walzer Alexander, Wangler Timothy et al. (2020-03)
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BibTeX
@inproceedings{pfan_wang_mata_flat.2019.PoSFfMME,
author = "Patrick Pfändler and Timothy Paul Wangler and Jaime Mata-Falcón and Robert Johann Flatt and Walter Kaufmann",
title = "Potentials of Steel-Fibers for Mesh Mould Elements",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-319-99519-9_19",
year = "2019",
volume = "19",
pages = "207--216",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 1st RILEM International Conference on Concrete and Digital Fabrication: Digital Concrete 2018",
editor = "Timothy Paul Wangler and Robert Johann Flatt",
}
Formatted Citation
P. Pfändler, T. P. Wangler, J. Mata-Falcón, R. J. Flatt and W. Kaufmann, “Potentials of Steel-Fibers for Mesh Mould Elements”, in Proceedings of the 1st RILEM International Conference on Concrete and Digital Fabrication: Digital Concrete 2018, 2019, vol. 19, pp. 207–216. doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-99519-9_19.
Pfändler, Patrick, Timothy Paul Wangler, Jaime Mata-Falcón, Robert Johann Flatt, and Walter Kaufmann. “Potentials of Steel-Fibers for Mesh Mould Elements”. In Proceedings of the 1st RILEM International Conference on Concrete and Digital Fabrication: Digital Concrete 2018, edited by Timothy Paul Wangler and Robert Johann Flatt, 19:207–16, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99519-9_19.