The paper presents the experience of a
working group within the RILEM Technical Committee
223-MSC ‘Masonry Strengthening with Composite
materials’, aimed at developing a standardized,
reliable procedure for characterizing the bonding
mechanism of masonry elements strengthened with composite materials under shear actions. Twelve
laboratories from European universities and research
centers were involved. Two different set-ups were
compared, for single-lap and double-lap shear tests
(the latter in two versions). Four kinds of fiber fabrics,
i.e., glass, carbon, basalt and steel, were applied with epoxy resins (wet lay-up system) to clay brick units,
for a total of 280 monotonic tests. The results provided
information regarding the response of externally
bonded-to-brick composites in terms of observed
failure mechanisms, load capacity, effective transfer
length, and bond shear stress–slip behavior. The test
results of the 12 laboratories constitute a set of
statistically representative data which may conveniently
be used for setting appropriate design provisions
and guidelines
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