Bonding Behavior of Repair Material Using Fly-Ash/Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag-Based Geopolymer
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Test Design
2.1. Material Properties
2.1.1. GGBFS
2.1.2. Fly Ash
2.1.3. Cement
2.1.4. NaOH
2.1.5. Sodium Silicate
2.1.6. Course Aggregate
2.1.7. Fine Aggregate
2.2. Specimen Production
3. Test Methods
3.1. Slant Shear Test
3.2. Split Tensile Test
3.3. Applying the AE Technique to the Split Tensile Test
3.4. Microstructural Characteristics
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Slant Shear Test
4.2. Split Tensile Test
4.3. Application of AE in the Split Tensile Test to Monitor the Failure of the Specimen
4.4. Damage Mode
4.5. Microstructural Characteristics
5. Conclusion
- 1.
- The slant shear strength and split tensile strength results indicated that the bond strength of the FGG repair material decreased with an increase in the liquid–solid ratio, and a favorable repair effectiveness could be achieved when the fly-ash substitution rate was 10%.
- 2.
- The damage modes revealed that greater cracking noise was produced when the geopolymers were damaged, and these polymers became sheet-shaped after damage was inflicted; therefore, FGG has low brittleness and fatigue resistance.
- 3.
- This study incorporated the AE technique into monitoring the damage behavior of the repaired structure, and demonstrated that a higher bond strength produced a higher energy activity in the middle stage, confirming that AE energy is correlated with bond strength.
- 4.
- Using SEM to observe the microstructural characteristics of this structure, this study revealed that the hydration products in the interfacial interphase were more noticeable when the fly-ash substitution rate was 10% compared with when it was 30%, revealing that the influence of bond strength was highly related to the hydration products present in the interfacial interphase.
- 5.
- FGG through the slant shear test, split tensile test found that the L/S increased bond strength will drop, and fly-ash amount of 10% can get better repair effect.
- 6.
- From the failure mode, it is known that there is a large burst of sound when the geopolymer is destroyed, and the failure form is tile-like, so the FGG has the characteristics of low brittleness and poor fatigue resistance.
- 7.
- We introduced AE to monitor the damage behavior. When the bond strength was better, the energy of the middle part of the sound signal was obviously more active, and it was found that the acoustic energy had a correlation with the bond strength.
- 8.
- It is found that the influence of bond strength is closely related to the product of the interface interphase when the hydration product of the interfacial interphase is more obvious when the fly-ash amount is 10%.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Components | PC (kg/m3) | Aggregates (kg/m3) | Water (kg/m3) | Properties of PCC | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fine | Coarse | fc’ (MPa) | ft’ (MPa) | |||
Proportions | 277 | 886 | 974 | 201 | 28.9 | 7.8 |
- fc’ = 28 days compressive strength (ψ = 10 cm, H = 20 cm);
- ft’ = 28 days bending strength (10 cm × 10 cm × 35 cm);
- PC = Portland cement; PCC = Portland cement concrete
Alkali Modulus | Alkali Equivalent | NaOH (M) | Bé | FA Amount (%) | L/S | Repair Angle (α) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.0 | 8% | 14 | 37° | 0/10 or 20 or 30 | 0.4 or 0.5 | 45° or 60° |
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Kuo, W.-T.; Liu, M.-Y.; Juang, C.-U. Bonding Behavior of Repair Material Using Fly-Ash/Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag-Based Geopolymer. Materials 2019, 12, 1697. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12101697
Kuo W-T, Liu M-Y, Juang C-U. Bonding Behavior of Repair Material Using Fly-Ash/Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag-Based Geopolymer. Materials. 2019; 12(10):1697. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12101697
Chicago/Turabian StyleKuo, Wen-Ten, Ming-Yao Liu, and Chuen-Ul Juang. 2019. "Bonding Behavior of Repair Material Using Fly-Ash/Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag-Based Geopolymer" Materials 12, no. 10: 1697. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12101697
APA StyleKuo, W. -T., Liu, M. -Y., & Juang, C. -U. (2019). Bonding Behavior of Repair Material Using Fly-Ash/Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag-Based Geopolymer. Materials, 12(10), 1697. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12101697