Recycled nylon fibers as cement mortar reinforcement
Saverio Spadea, Ilenia Farina, Anna Carrafiello, Fernando Fraternali

TL;DR
This study explores the use of recycled nylon fibers from waste fishing nets as reinforcement in cement mortars, demonstrating significant improvements in tensile strength and toughness, with environmental benefits.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive characterization of recycled nylon fibers and evaluates their effectiveness as reinforcement in cementitious mortars, highlighting environmental and mechanical advantages.
Findings
Tensile strength increased by up to 35%.
Toughness improved up to 13 times.
Recycled nylon fibers show high potential for sustainable reinforcement.
Abstract
We investigate engineering applications of recycled nylon fibers obtained from waste fishing nets, focusing our attention on the use of recycled nylon fibers as tensile reinforcement of cementitious mortars. We begin by characterizing the tensile behavior of both unconditioned and alkali-cured recycled nylon fibers obtained through manual cutting of waste fishing net filaments, with the aim of assessing the resistance of such materials to chemical attacks. Special attention is also given to evaluating the workability of fresh mortar and the possible impacts of contaminants released by waste fishing nets into the environment. Next, we deal with compression and bending tests on cementitious mortars reinforced with recycled nylon fibers, and establish comparisons with the experimental behavior of the unreinforced material and with results given in existing literature. In our analysis of…
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