# Experimental Investigation on the Flexural Performance of CFRP-Reinforced Timber Composite Beams

**Authors:** Hao Zhang, Yan Cao, Hai Fang, Honglei Xie, Chen Chen

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ma19061196 · Materials · 2026-03-18

## TL;DR

This study tests timber beams reinforced with carbon fiber to improve strength and efficiency in construction.

## Contribution

A novel hybrid beam design combining timber and CFRP is experimentally evaluated for flexural performance.

## Key findings

- Wrapped beams showed 15–20% higher ultimate moments than unwrapped ones.
- Two CFRP layers provided optimal strength and material efficiency.
- Hybrid beams exhibited linear-elastic behavior before brittle failure.

## Abstract

The development of lightweight, high-strength structural systems is a persistent pursuit in modern civil engineering. This paper presents an experimental study on a novel hybrid beam concept in which a sawn timber core is fully bonded with an externally applied Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Polymer (CFRP) laminate, fabricated through a controlled hand lay-up process. The design seeks to exploit the complementary characteristics of the two materials: timber provides compressive resistance and serves as a permanent formwork, while the CFRP carries tensile stresses with high efficiency. Fourteen hybrid beams, with variations in the number of longitudinal CFRP layers (one, two or, three), the presence or absence of longitudinal CFRP layers bonded along the top and bottom surfaces, and the presence or absence of circumferential wrapping in the pure bending region, were tested under four-point bending alongside two solid timber control beams. The results demonstrate that circumferential wrapping is a critical design detail. Wrapped beams consistently failed by tensile rupture of the CFRP—the intended failure mode—and exhibited ultimate moments 15–20% higher than their unwrapped counterparts. Beams with two longitudinal CFRP layers offered the most favorable balance between strength enhancement and material efficiency; adding a third layer shifted the failure mode to crushing of the timber core, indicating a core-limited condition. All hybrid beams showed pronounced linear-elastic behavior up to sudden brittle failure, with performance variability attributable to the inherent inhomogeneity of wood and the sensitivity of the hand lay-up process. The study provides quantitative data and mechanistic insights that support the design and application of bonded CFRP–timber hybrid beams as efficient structural members.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** CFRP (-)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028152/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028152