The use of environmentally friendly materials is becoming increasingly important in order to increase sustainability and reduce carbon emissions in reinforced concrete structures. In this context, glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) bars, which are proposed as an alternative to traditional steel reinforcements, are attracting attention in engineering applications thanks to their advantages, such as high corrosion resistance, low weight, and electromagnetic permeability. However, the lower elasticity modulus of GFRP reinforcement compared to steel causes greater displacement and crack width under bending and shear effects, leading to certain limitations in structural performance. Due to the limited number of comprehensive analyses in the literature that simultaneously consider parameters such as reinforcement diameter, concrete strength, and stirrup spacing, this study aims to reveal the interactive effects of these parameters through numerical analyses and contribute to existing research. In this context, beam models using GFRP reinforcements with diameters of 10 mm and 12 mm, concrete strengths of 25 MPa and 40 MPa, and different stirrup spacings were analyzed using the ABAQUS (2022) software with a three-dimensional nonlinear finite element method.
Sümer et al. (Fri,) studied this question.