1. Introduction
Polymer concrete (PC) is an alternative to cement concrete material which employs polymeric resin as a matrix binder together with conventional aggregates primarily of sands and gravels. According to Mebarkia et al. [
1], PC poses a wider range of strength with 40–60 MPa compared to cement concrete strength range of 10–60 MPa. In addition to that, PC has good practicability due to the various types of polymeric resins available to be applied as matrix elements and also has high compatibility with the consumption of alternative aggregates, especially from waste and slag materials [
2,
3,
4,
5]. Recently, a by-product of the tin smelting process has been introduced as aggregates in polyester-based polymer concrete. Tin slag polymer concrete (TSPC) is one of the particle-reinforced composite materials which consists of tin slag (TS) particles as reinforcement and polymeric resin as a matrix. TSPC study has made a debut by evaluating on its potential as alternative concrete material to be employed in structural material application. According to Faidzal et al. [
6], TSPC was able to produce the optimum compressive strength (58 MPa) by 70:30 aggregate-to-resin ratio with uniformly graded fine TS particles (<1 mm) mixed with unsaturated polyester resin (UPR) that has been polymerized by methyl ethyl ketone peroxide (MEKP) with 2% of the resin weight. The wet mixture was then has been cast into a 50 mm diameter specimen mould with 100 mm height and cured at room temperature for 3 days prior to compression testing. The superiority of TSPC over conventional cement concrete material originated from the preferable properties of polymer concrete and the fact that TSPC is produced by recycling industrial waste as its primary composition. According to previous studies, polymer concrete is superior to cement concrete in terms of strength, quick curing, low cured shrinkage, excellent adhesion to most surfaces, resistance to chemicals and corrosion, excellent damping properties, low water absorbability, and the ability to be cast into complex shapes [
7,
8,
9,
10]. In addition to that, TSPC in particular has applied TS waste as aggregates which provide a solution to tin smelting production and also preserve natural aggregates. Reducing the dependency on natural aggregates is becoming essential for sustainability goals as natural aggregates, such as gravels, granites, stones and river sands are widely used in concrete production, and the consumption of these aggregates has caused the increasing trend in the activity of the aggregate mining process [
11]. According to Ozcan et al. [
12] and Ukpong [
13], the effects of natural aggregate mining are water pollution, sediment growth, mudflows, erosions, landslides or noise and dust due to stone blasting effects. Therefore, by promoting TS particles as aggregates, TSPC may preserve the consumption of natural aggregates and thus sustain the resources.
A recent trend in TSPC studies since Faidzal et al. [
6] has been dominated by studies on the strengthening potential of the TSPC under compressive loading through external means. According to Raza et al. [
14], external strengthening of concrete structures has become popular compared to traditional strengthening due to ease and speed of installation, less labour work, minimum change to the original geometry and aesthetics of the structure, high strength-to-weight ratio, and most importantly, its occupant-friendly nature (repair on site). Strengthening is a process to enhance the mechanical properties of a material, especially those designed for structural application. According to Ueda [
15], the durability of structural material is a top priority because structural material in service will face natural disasters or unexpected destructive forces from earthquakes, tsunamis, tornados, cyclic loadings, creeps, and chemical or frost attacks. Therefore, strengthening structural materials may provide safety, cost savings and prolong material service life. In the case of TSPC, studies on external strengthening by glass fibre-reinforced polymer (GFRP) and carbon fibre-reinforced polymer (CFRP) confinement with various parameters have been performed [
16,
17,
18,
19]. To summarise, the study revealed that the highest TSPC strength enhancement has occurred with one layer of CFRP wrapping with up to 128% compared to unconfined TSPC. In addition to strength enhancement, cement concrete material generally failed with brittle shear failure due to crushing during compressive loading application [
20]. However, according to Manda et al. [
7], TSPC has shown brittle failure with additional plastic straining behaviour and the addition of FRP confinement has further modified the fracture behaviour of TSPC through effective stress transfer from the TSPC core to confinement material.
Although FRP confinement is proven capable of producing an enhanced strength of concrete column advantages to its strength-to-weight ratio behaviour, the failure mode of FRP confined concrete is explosive and sudden with no warning sign due to its brittle inheritance nature of FRP in tension which is undesirable in design consideration. Therefore, Chin et al. [
21], suggested steel tube confinement is safer to manipulate the ductile property of steel so that the failure will occur gradually with pre-failure warning signs which are more desirable in the design consideration of structural material. According to Zhou et al. [
22] and Kedziora et al. [
23], when a steel tube jacketing is used to externally strengthen a concrete column, the brittle shear failure was effectively prevented with the increase in lateral strength resulting in higher compressive strength compared to an unconfined concrete column. The study reported that there was very little effect observed on plastic deformation capacity, indicating that the metal tube confinement has provided enough ductility to reduce the brittleness of the core concrete column during crushing failure. The effectiveness of metallic material jacketing has been proven to enhance the strength and behaviour of conventional concrete material but for TSPC, a study on metallic material confinement has yet to be found in the literature. Therefore, the purpose of this article is to present the experimental finding on TSPC strengthening under compressive loading with metallic material confinement. The finding will open up space for extensive studies in the application of metallic material confinement on TSPC especially in exploring its strengthening potential for structural material design application.
3. Results and Discussions
3.1. Average Compressive Strength
The outcome of mechanical testing has measured several data for each test specimen, including maximum deformation, maximum load, compressive strength, and fractured energy. In addition to that, the average compressive strength for PM and FM sample is also calculated together with the percentage of strength enhancement compared to the unconfined TSPC sample (UC).
Table 3 presents the experimental testing results for all of the test samples (UC, PM and FM) consisting of nine specimens, namely UC1, UC2, UC3, PM1, PM2, PM3, FM1, FM2, and FM3. There was the highest level of consistency in the test results for sample UC where for all of the specimen (UC1, UC2 and UC3), the experimental result has provided measurement in smallest deviation for all of the deformation, loads, compressive strength, and fractured energy value. The deformation for the UC sample is between 3.028–3.07 mm corresponding to maximum load with a fall within 115 kN–116.22 kN. The compressive strength measurement ranges from 57.34 MPa to 59.19 MPa and the fracture energy for UC samples is in between 341.39 J to 387.01 J. The average compressive strength for unconfined TSPC (UC sample) is 58.37 MPa and as a control sample, the data for percentage of strength enhancement is not required for this sample.
Then, for sample PM, test results revealed different findings with larger deviations among data measured except for load and compressive strength for PM2 and PM3 which is considered acceptable in terms of consistency. The experimental results on PM1 have indicated a potential for excessive pre-loading compared with the results of PM2 and PM3. The deformation for each specimen (PM1, PM2, and PM3) is 2.614 mm, 4.288 mm, and 3.458 mm corresponding to maximum loads of 188.23 kN, 155.28 kN, and 154.44 kN. The compressive strength and fracture energy measurement for sample PM is also in a similar pattern with maximum loads of 95.86 MPa, 79.08 MPa, and 78.66 MPa (PM1, PM2, and PM3), while fracture energy is 1123.74 J, 1080.3 J, and 960.23 J (PM1, PM2, and PM3). The fracture energy value indicates that PM1 has to absorb larger energy (1123.74 J) to cause fracture compared with PM2 (1080.3 J) and PM3 (960.23 J). The average compressive strength for TSPC with partial metal tube confinement is 84.53 MPa. Calculation on compressive strength enhancement after the TSPC column specimen is strengthened with partial metal tube confinement results in 44.83% of increments compared to unconfined TSPC as the control test specimen. The percentage of strength enhancement of the highest strength is on specimen PM1 (95.86 MPa) from UC1 (59.19 MPa) with a 61.95% enhancement percentage.
The test results for sample FM indicate the highest deviation, especially for FM3 in terms of deformation. FM3 has achieved 8.986 mm deformation while others are only 2.872 mm and 2.726 mm (FM1 and FM2). However, the maximum load achievement for FM1 and FM2 is larger with 258.86 MPa and 261.52 MPa. These conditions need to be further analysed as obviously, the measurement has revealed that even if FM3 has the highest deformation (8.986 mm), the maximum load measured is only 204.63 MPa indicating that the strain of FM3 has increased without strength enhancement. Then, the compressive strength for sample FM has shown that FM1 has the highest strength with 131.84 MPa followed by FM 2 and FM 3 with 110.27 MPa and 104.22 MPa. However, the fracture energy of sample FM has shown an opposite condition where FM3 has the highest fracture energy followed by FM2 and FM1 with 1821.98 J, 1405.21 J, and 1236.38 J. The average compressive strength for TSPC with fully metal tube confinement is 115.44 MPa. Calculation on compressive strength enhancement after the TSPC column specimen is strengthened with fully metal tube confinement results in 97.78% compared to unconfined TSPC as the control test specimen. The percentage of strength enhancement of the highest strength is on specimen FM1 (131.84 MPa) from UC1 (59.19 MPa) with a 122.74% enhancement percentage.
3.2. Load versus Deformation
The load versus deformation curve represents the deformation that occurs for every step of load increment on a material based on a specified loading rate. The material then resisted the deformation based on its cross-sectional area and the level of this resistance is known as the material strength which also causes strain based on the ratio of the change in shape that occurs to the original shape of the material. Therefore, other than load versus deformation, another material behaviour curve which is the stress versus strain curve must be observed to analyse the material behaviour under external load application. In nature, under load application, all materials are elastic up to a certain extent. To this extent, material behaviour will exhibit a linear relationship and the slope of the linear curve representing the stiffness of the material, known as Young’s modulus. Then, the material will yield before experiencing plastic behaviour which represents by a more complex and nonlinear relationship up to fracture.
Figure 7a shows that the control sample (UC) has shown consistency for every specimen in both curves (load–deformation and stress–strain). During initial loading, the UC sample exhibits a linear relationship up to a yield point and then turns into strain hardening up to maximum load. After that, the UC samples start to soften until they fracture. Then, the length of softening curve indicates that the unconfined TSPC has gradually produced crack initiation before the crack propagates until actually fractured. Other than crack, shear failure or crushing failure may also be expected to occur with the same mechanism where it initiates and propagates before fracture. From the curves, it is expected that TSPC is not totally brittle as the failure does not occur in a sudden manner as most cement concrete material.
Figure 7b shows the material behaviour for TSPC with partial metal tube confinement (PM sample) under compressive loadings. Initially, all PM specimens exhibited linear behaviour (elastic) up to the yield point. After yielding, all of the PM specimens (PM1, PM2, and PM3) again experience strain hardening where the strength continues to increase up to maximum load. Then, upon reaching maximum load, PM1 shows softening behaviour up to a certain extent and regains strength until a fracture occurs during secondary strain hardening behaviour. Different from PM1, the other specimens which are PM2 and PM3 have shown no sign of increase or decrease in strength until fracture occurred. The highest maximum strength is achieved by PM1 which shows the highest peak of the material behaviour curve. Another test sample is FM which described the behaviour of TSPC with fully metal tube confinement under compressive loading.
Figure 7c shows that the FM behaviour has shown an almost similar trend to PM behaviour where at first all of the specimens (FM1, FM2, and FM3) experienced linear relationship (elastic) up to yielding. After yielding, all of the FM specimens again experience strain hardening and after reaching maximum strength, FM1 softens before regaining strength and fractures during secondary strain hardening. However, FM2 and FM3 continue to undergo plastic straining without any change in strength magnitude up to fracture. The highest maximum strength is achieved by FM1 which shows the highest peak of material behaviour curve.
3.3. Comparison of All Test Sample Behaviour under Compressive Load
The previous section reported the experimental material behaviour for each of the test samples (UC, PM, and FM) separately. In this section, all of the material behaviour curves including the load versus deformation and stress versus strain curve are plotted on the same graph. The reasons are to facilitate observation behaviour and compare the test sample behaviour under compressive load. Through this section, the effect of partial metal tube confinement and fully metal tube confinement on the TSPC column sample under compression may be observed and compared by referring to the material behaviour curve.
Figure 8 shows the load versus deformation and stress versus strain curve for all of the test specimens from samples UC, PM, and FM. The plotting facilitates detailed comparison among the entire variant of the test specimens. In terms of the curve shape, the UC sample exhibits a simple curve shape compared to PM and FM samples. The reason is that brittle materials such as TSPC always behave in a much simpler response to external load applications similar to other concrete materials. The UC curve has a linear response in the beginning and after yielding, it starts to undergo plastic straining with strain hardening behaviour where the UC sample gains strength with larger strain progression. After maximum loads, the UC sample plastic behaviour exchanges from hardening to softening before a fracture occurs. All UC specimens (UC1, UC2, and UC3) have shown similar behaviour under compressive loads. With the application of partial metal tube confinement, it can be seen that the curve has been modified and exhibit some complexity after the yield point. This condition occurs because metal is a ductile material that responds to complex testing forces, especially under compressive loads. The PM1 specimen has provided higher strength enhancement compared to PM2 and PM3. After yielding, PM1 undergo strain softening behaviour up to a certain extent and regains strength through strain hardening for a while before fracture. PM2 and PM3 have shown almost no hardening or softening after yielding up to a fracture. In comparison with the unconfined specimen, the application of partial metallic material confinement by a metal tube has further enhanced the maximum strength and modified the failure pattern of TSPC.
Then, the application of fully metal tube confinement has provided a similar response with partial confinement. From the curve in
Figure 8, FM1 achieved higher strength enhancement compared to PM1 but the material behaviour has shown almost identical response where FM1 also undergo strain softening behaviour up to a certain extent and regain strength through strain hardening for a while before fracture. In addition to that, FM2 and FM3 also have shown almost similar behaviour with PM2 and PM3. Both also exhibit no hardening or softening behaviour after yielding up to fracture. This condition indicates that metal tube confinement either partially or fully modified TSPC behaviour by exhibiting balance in brittle and ductile failure of TSPC. As a comparison, the curves in
Figure 8 show that fully metal tube confinement has further enhanced the maximum strength of TSPC compared to partial metal tube confinement on TSPC specimen. In addition, the material behaviour has also exhibited similarity in their response on compressive loads.
3.4. Compressive Modulus, Yield Point and Maximum Strength
The experimental results revealed that among all variants of test specimens, UC1, PM1, and FM1 provided the highest compressive strength. Therefore, the empirical test results and material behavioural curve for these samples have been further analysed to explain their properties by focusing on compressive modulus, yield point, and maximum strength.
Figure 9 shows a graphical presentation of those three parameters with grid lines that facilitate the analysis and comparison among the test samples involved.
Before reaching the yield point, every sample shows a linear relationship indicating the elastic deformation where the samples are capable of regaining their original shape upon the elimination of test loads up to this extent. The slope of the linear relationship in
Figure 9a describes the degree of material stiffness, also known as compressive modulus. The compressive modulus value is proportional to each sample’s ability to resist deformation (stiffness). According to
Figure 9a,b, the slope of the linear curve is higher in FM (7.64 GPa) followed by PM (5.98 GPa) and UC (2.84 GPa). These findings indicate that TSPC is stiffest under full metal tube confinement, stiffer under partial metal tube confinement, and less stiff without any confinement. The bar chart in
Figure 9b shows the compressive modulus value increase from UC, PM, and FM. The effect of confinement size may be concluded by increasing the stiffness of the TSPC column specimens.
The linear relationship due to elastic behaviour response as displayed by each test sample (FM, PM, and UC) from the beginning of compressive loading was then changed at one point and this point is known as the yield point. The yield point is identified by observation of noticeable changes in the material behaviour line from linear to nonlinear or from straight to a significant bend that occurs. According to
Figure 9a,c, the yield stress value is higher in FM (125.33 MPa) followed by PM (78.58 MPa) and UC (41.41 MPa). These findings indicate that the yield strength of TSPC depends on the percentage of confinement area on TSPC as FM provided the highest yield strength compared to PM. The bar chart in
Figure 9c shows the increase in yield stress value from UC, PM, and FM. Both compressive modulus and yield stress value, shown by the experimental results, reveal that the stress transfer from TSPC core to metal tube confinement occurs gradually at the start of compressive loading because the elastic modulus for every sample is different. The rate of stress transfer between TSPC core and confinement was then increased after yield point due to the larger different in yield stress value for every sample.
After yielding, all of the test samples continue to gain strength in plastic straining conditions. The strain hardening behaviour continues until maximum strength is achieved. Upon reaching maximum strength, the material behaviour turns into strain softening up to fracture. According to
Figure 9a,d, the compressive strength value indicates that FM has the highest strength (131.84 MPa) followed by PM (95.86 Mpa) compared with unconfined TSPC (59.19 Mpa). The percentage of strength enhancement is 97.78% with the application of fully metal tube confinement (FM sample) and 44.83% with the application of partial metal tube confinement (PM sample). The bar chart in
Figure 9d shows the compressive stress value increase from UC, PM, and FM. The effectiveness of metal tube confinement is proven by observing how the amount of metal tube confinement has successfully enhanced the compressive strength of TSPC.
3.5. Failure Modes of Unconfined TSPC
Initially, the test sample is subjected to uniaxial compressive force. For unconfined TSPC, the uniaxial force is gradually applied until the sample failed upon maximum principal stress generated through the sample exceeding the material strength. In the case of confined TSPC, the test load is becoming tri-axial force consisting of axial compressive force and lateral force from the confinement material. The tri-axial force acting on the TSPC core has generated combined principle and shear stress. Upon the maximum principle and shear stress generated exceeding the material strength for both TSPC core and confinement material, then failure occurs. The different failure mechanism has produced different failure modes on test samples for unconfined TSPC (UC), partial metal confinement (PM), and full metal confinement (FM).
Figure 10 describes the failure mode of unconfined TSPC as a control sample. From the figure, there was a sign of a longitudinal crack which originated from the bottom of the test sample (UC). This is due to the larger and branched crack formation on the bottom compared to the upper location on the UC test sample. Other than a longitudinal crack, there was also a sign of crushing failure detected on the lower middle section at one side of the unconfined TSPC sample. The combination of cracking and crushing failures may be because even under strain softening fracture, TSPC still holds some strength that prevents it from total rupture. The remaining strength is high enough to induce a secondary type of failure mechanism. From observation, the primary failure that occurs is cracking; before total fracture, the formation of crushing failure has been spotted.
3.6. Failure Modes of TSPC with Partial Metal Tube Confinement
Figure 11 explained the failure mode of TSPC with partial metal tube confinement represented by the PM sample. For partial confinement, the initial load is totally endured by the TSPC core because the testing load from the top pressure plate is not touching the confinement at all. Therefore, the primary load is resisted by TSPC, causing lateral expansion in the middle of the TSPC column. Then, due to the confinement effect, the stress transfer occurs from TSPC to confinement and the strength regain has been exhibited due to this condition (resistance to lateral expansion by TSPC core). From
Figure 11a, some expansion occurred on both the top and bottom sides of the metal tube confinement due to secondary compressive load resistance. Observation on the TSPC core has shown three types of failure; shear cracking and crushing failure. Another minor failure type that can be observed is longitudinal cracking failure. Shear cracking occurs at the bottom side of the test sample and longitudinal cracking occurs at the top side. Some crushing was detected on the top side and more crushing on the bottom side of the PM sample. A friction cutting is employed to cut open the metal tube to examine the condition inside the confinement. According to
Figure 11b upon the cutting of the metal tube, the shear crack and longitudinal crack on the bottom side have progressed further into a bigger opening indicating that the metal tube is holding the TSPC from fracture. Then, after a small portion of the confinement is peeled out, the observation on the adhesive binder indicates that it is in good condition but some debonding has occurred between the confinement and the TSPC core. In addition to that, previously detected shear cracking has also progressed under confinement and with the total removal of that small portion from confinement material the larger opening from the cracking has occurred.
3.7. Failure Modes of TSPC with Fully Metal Tube Confinement
Figure 12 shows the failure mechanism of TSPC with fully metal tube confinement represented by the FM sample. Different from the PM sample, the confinement application has covered the whole TSPC area from bottom to top. This condition has caused the top pressure plate not only to touch the TSPC top surface but also the top surface of the metal tube confinement. Therefore, during test loadings, both the TSPC and metal tube confinement will resist the loading, producing compressive strength values representing the FM sample. Detailed average strength and the test sample behaviour may be referred to in the previous section.
In this section, the failure modes of TSPC with fully metal tube confinement have been observed and examined. Regarding the failure mechanism,
Figure 12a shows the FM sample condition after mechanical testing. Due to full metal tube confinement, the condition of the TSPC core is hidden inside and cannot be seen. However, observation of the FM sample condition has revealed a similar general failure mechanism of metallic material which experience ductile failure. The loss in strength occurs after plastic deformation, shown by ductile crushing of the metal tube. The ductile crushing has caused several metallic shells to fold randomly distributed on the whole metal tube confinement material, which is apparent on the top and bottom sides but at different locations indicating the likelihood of twisting of the metal tube confinement.
Intense observation by close-up view reveals that debonding between the TSPC core and metal tube has occurred as shown in
Figure 12b. Additionally, in the figure, the FM sample is cut open in small sections by friction cutting to examine what happened to the TSPC core that is initially hidden behind the confinement. The debonding is proven as the cut on a small portion of the metal tube easily peeled out from the FM sample. The observation revealed that debonding occurs randomly where some adhesives are bound to TSPC, and some are bound to the metal tube. In addition, some of the shear cracking failures have also been detected on the TSPC which is not visible before the confinement is cut open. The shear cracking location occurred right behind the metal tube with apparent ductile folding on the top and bottom of the FM sample.
The FM test samples have shown similar failure behaviour with PM sample but with higher magnitude of compressive modulus, yield strength, and maximum strength (
Figure 9). Both samples exhibited repeats in the strain hardening response due to the primary loss of strength and regain strength before fracture. The relationship between failure modes on FM sample with its behavioural curve under compression is likely due to premature debonding between TSPC and metal tube confinement. This situation occurs due to the simultaneous compressive load imposed on both the TSPC and metal tube confinement top surface. However, both the top pressure plate and bottom pressure plate of the test machine hold the FM sample to resist further load increments until a clear sign of strength loss due to ductile crushing of the metal tube is detected by the machine actuators and the test is finished. In general, full metal tube confinement has effectively been proven to enhance the TSPC strength to a maximum level but in a particular way. A summary of the failure modes on all samples is listed in
Table 4.
4. Conclusions
The experimental study on TSPC strengthening under compression with metallic material confinement was performed with metal tube confinement on a TSPC short-column specimen. This study yields 100% novelty considering the metallic material application to enhance TSPC strength through external constraint has never been reported in the previous literature. In this study, the compressive strength of TSPC enhanced with metal tube confinement application from 59.19 MPa (UC1) to 95.86 MPa (PM1) and 131.84 MPa (FM1) representing 61.95% and 122.74% of strength enhancement percentage. The enhancement was measured after a compressive test on TSPC short column with the application of an average 0.5 mm thickness of confinement binders (Epoxy Sikadur 330) and 1 mm thickness of MS metal tube (ASTM 106) with partial (PM) and fully (FM) confinement. For comparison, previous studies on concrete external strengthening by Pannachet and Boonpichetvong [
29,
30] which employ 0.69 mm thickness of mild steel sheet and 0.75 mm thickness of zinc–alum metal sheet as confinement on the concrete column have provided 98% and 153.1% of strength enhancement. However, without counting the performance of metal confinement on conventional cement concrete strengthening, there was better maximum strength by FRP confinement on TSPC in particular where the maximum percentage of compressive strength enhancement of 128.06% was recorded in the previous study with the application of CFRP confinement [
11]. In spite of that, metallic material confinement preferably has revealed different failure behaviour. In general, FRP confinement on TSPC has shown sudden and brittle fracture during failure where the material behavioural curve has no sign of strain softening but with metallic material confinement, the curve has shown a large amount of strain softening before fracture. This behaviour occurs on both TSPC with partial (PM) and full (FM) metallic material confinement. In addition, the failure mode has indicated that the high ductility of metallic material confinement has effectively held the TSPC from sudden fracture where the metal tube in partial confinement shows ductile expansion while the metal tube in full confinement has shown ductile crushing. This failure mode is preferable especially for safety criteria in the design consideration of a structural material because the ductile deformation on metallic material confinement occurs gradually with pre-failure warning signs to provide enough time for hazard management and corrective action. In addition, metal confinement is also capable of absorbing potential failure due to impact and cyclic loading with its ductile behaviour. Generally, this study can conclude that metallic material confinement on TSPC under compressive load has successfully providing the strength enhancement and modified the failure behaviour of TSPC. Further empirical studies on metallic material confinement on TSPC may continue to compare between different types of metallic material confinement or examine the effect of long-term exposure under various conditions on metallic material confinement. In addition to that, a study on the optimal reinforcement method on TSPC can also be carried and obtained through quantitative experimental results analysis in future research. Additionally, numerical analysis using finite element model may also be initiated to provide parametric study on metallic material confinement on TSPC.