This paper presents the results of a preliminary study aimed at assessing the crack sealing capacity in chloride environments of different concrete mixtures, incorporating supplementary cementitious materials as well as self-healing enhancing crystalline admixtures. For each addition, also including pulverized fuel ash and silica fume, different contents were taken into consideration. Cylinder specimens were pre-cracked in splitting up to three different crack-opening ranges, simulating different service conditions, and then exposed to different conditioning environments, also containing different concentrations of sodium chloride and including both permanent immersion and wet/dry cycles. Healing conditioning was performed up to three months and crack sealing was visually inspected and quantified via image analysis procedures, monthly. Optimum dosages of each cement substitute/addition were quantified, also considering, besides the healing capacity, also the fresh state performance and compressive strength development. The good performance of mixes with crystalline admixture even under open-air exposure, as well as of other investigated mixes with reference to crack openings and exposure conditions, paves the way to revise the significance of a serviceability design parameter such as the maximum allowable crack width as a function of the exposure with the concept of a sealable crack width.

Crack sealing capacity in chloride-rich environments of mortars containing different cement substitutes and crystalline admixtures

Cuenca, Estefania;Ferrara, Liberato
2018-01-01

Abstract

This paper presents the results of a preliminary study aimed at assessing the crack sealing capacity in chloride environments of different concrete mixtures, incorporating supplementary cementitious materials as well as self-healing enhancing crystalline admixtures. For each addition, also including pulverized fuel ash and silica fume, different contents were taken into consideration. Cylinder specimens were pre-cracked in splitting up to three different crack-opening ranges, simulating different service conditions, and then exposed to different conditioning environments, also containing different concentrations of sodium chloride and including both permanent immersion and wet/dry cycles. Healing conditioning was performed up to three months and crack sealing was visually inspected and quantified via image analysis procedures, monthly. Optimum dosages of each cement substitute/addition were quantified, also considering, besides the healing capacity, also the fresh state performance and compressive strength development. The good performance of mixes with crystalline admixture even under open-air exposure, as well as of other investigated mixes with reference to crack openings and exposure conditions, paves the way to revise the significance of a serviceability design parameter such as the maximum allowable crack width as a function of the exposure with the concept of a sealable crack width.
2018
chloride environment; crystalline admixtures; pulverized fuel ash; Self-healing; silica fume; Ceramics and Composites; Waste Management and Disposal
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1055623
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