Environmental assessment of non-metallic reinforcement for concrete structures as an alternative to steel reinforcement
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articlePeer-reviewed
publishedVersion
Author
Stoiber, Nadine
Hammerl, Mathias
Kromoser, Benjamin
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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The concrete industry accounts for a significant amount of CO2 emissions worldwide. One approach to counter this issue includes material reduction of structural components via the use of non-metallic reinforcement, such as carbon, glass and basalt fibre reinforced polymers. On the one hand, non-metallic reinforcement. However, as its environmental impact has not been sufficiently investigated yet, a Life Cycle Assessment of the production phase is presented within this paper. In a first step, the environmental impact of the sole various reinforcement components and types is compared to each other per mass, per tensile or rather yield strength as well as density unit, at which an environmental disadvantage of especially carbon-fibre reinforced polymers is apparent in most cases. In a further step, a focus is put on applying the environmental data of carbon-fibre reinforced polymers to a pedestrian bridge, which is finally compared to a conventionally reinforced concrete bridge and a steel bridge with similar boundary conditions. The latter results indicate that an adequate application of carbon-fibre reinforcement in structural components has the potential to lead to designs of less environmental impact in comparison to conventionally reinforced pendants.
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