Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses

Bamboo is deemed an emerging constructional material with promising application projections due to the reliable natural properties and advantageous structural characteristics. However, there is a lack of systematic studies on the mechanical characteristics of the bamboo species from a microstructura...

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Main Authors: Chahrour, Mutaz K., Hosen, Md. Akter, Goh, Yingxin, Tong, Teong Yen, Yap, Soon Poh, Khadimallah, Mohamed Amine
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Published: Hindawi Ltd. 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/28265/
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spelling my.um.eprints.282652022-04-12T07:47:14Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/28265/ Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses Chahrour, Mutaz K. Hosen, Md. Akter Goh, Yingxin Tong, Teong Yen Yap, Soon Poh Khadimallah, Mohamed Amine TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) Bamboo is deemed an emerging constructional material with promising application projections due to the reliable natural properties and advantageous structural characteristics. However, there is a lack of systematic studies on the mechanical characteristics of the bamboo species from a microstructural scale. Hence, this paper investigated the primary mechanical properties of the bamboo specimens (Dendrocalamus asper) with further microstructural analysis on the bamboo failure. The direct tensile strength of bamboo specimens was about 226.45 MPa, while the final splitting tensile modulus was found to be 2.88 MPa. Microstructural characterisation of the failed tensile specimens indicates that fibre debonding is the main failure mechanism under tensile conditions. On the other hand, splitting and end bearing failure were found on compression test specimens. In addition, nanoindentation tests were carried out on different cell structures to articulate the hardness and Young's modulus. The elastic modulus of the fibre cell walls is three times that of the parenchyma cell walls, yet the hardness values are comparable. This confirms that the specimen failure of previous macromechanical testing is due to crack propagation along the parenchyma cells, instead of the cell walls. Based on the experimental studies discussed in this paper, the conclusion can convey a positive message regarding the ability of bamboo as a primary sustainable substitute for conventional construction materials. Hindawi Ltd. 2021-12-20 Article PeerReviewed Chahrour, Mutaz K. and Hosen, Md. Akter and Goh, Yingxin and Tong, Teong Yen and Yap, Soon Poh and Khadimallah, Mohamed Amine (2021) Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses. Advances in Materials Science and Engineering, 2021. ISSN 1687-8434, DOI https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/1571905 <https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/1571905>. 10.1155/2021/1571905
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
spellingShingle TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Chahrour, Mutaz K.
Hosen, Md. Akter
Goh, Yingxin
Tong, Teong Yen
Yap, Soon Poh
Khadimallah, Mohamed Amine
Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses
description Bamboo is deemed an emerging constructional material with promising application projections due to the reliable natural properties and advantageous structural characteristics. However, there is a lack of systematic studies on the mechanical characteristics of the bamboo species from a microstructural scale. Hence, this paper investigated the primary mechanical properties of the bamboo specimens (Dendrocalamus asper) with further microstructural analysis on the bamboo failure. The direct tensile strength of bamboo specimens was about 226.45 MPa, while the final splitting tensile modulus was found to be 2.88 MPa. Microstructural characterisation of the failed tensile specimens indicates that fibre debonding is the main failure mechanism under tensile conditions. On the other hand, splitting and end bearing failure were found on compression test specimens. In addition, nanoindentation tests were carried out on different cell structures to articulate the hardness and Young's modulus. The elastic modulus of the fibre cell walls is three times that of the parenchyma cell walls, yet the hardness values are comparable. This confirms that the specimen failure of previous macromechanical testing is due to crack propagation along the parenchyma cells, instead of the cell walls. Based on the experimental studies discussed in this paper, the conclusion can convey a positive message regarding the ability of bamboo as a primary sustainable substitute for conventional construction materials.
format Article
author Chahrour, Mutaz K.
Hosen, Md. Akter
Goh, Yingxin
Tong, Teong Yen
Yap, Soon Poh
Khadimallah, Mohamed Amine
author_facet Chahrour, Mutaz K.
Hosen, Md. Akter
Goh, Yingxin
Tong, Teong Yen
Yap, Soon Poh
Khadimallah, Mohamed Amine
author_sort Chahrour, Mutaz K.
title Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses
title_short Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses
title_full Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses
title_fullStr Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses
title_full_unstemmed Failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses
title_sort failure mechanisms of structural bamboo using microstructural analyses
publisher Hindawi Ltd.
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/28265/
_version_ 1735409549467189248
score 13.160551