Effect of Cement Type on the Mechanical Behavior and Permeability of Concrete Subjected to High Temperatures
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials, Specimen Preparation, Curing, and Heating
3. Testing Procedures
3.1. Concrete Permeability
- Q: the measured gas flow intensity Q = V/t (m3/s);
- V: gas volume (m3)
- t: time (s)
- Pa: atmospheric pressure (1 bar = 105 Pa);
- P: absolute pressure (Pa);
- A: cross section area of the specimen (m2);
- η: nitrogen viscosity; η = 17.15 (Pa⋅s);
- L: thickness of the specimen (m).
3.2. Mechanical Tests
4. Test Results and Discussion
4.1. Initial Properties
4.2. Evolution of Bulk Density with Temperature
4.3. Evolution of Compressive Strength and Splitting Tensile Strength with Temperature Exposure
4.4. Relationship between Stress and Strain, and the Modulus of Elasticity Evaluation
4.5. Heated Concrete Permeability Evolution
4.6. Permeability vs. High Temperature Damage Factor
5. Conclusions
- Type of cement influences compressive strength and permeability of 90 day concrete. Concretes with CEMIII presented lower permeability and higher compressive strength for both basalt and riverbed aggregate concretes;
- High temperature exposure strongly influences the mechanical and physical properties of concretes, and the damage to concrete increases with exposure temperature. A temperature increase leads to the reduction of strength and modulus of elasticity. The splitting tensile strength decrease is more pronounced than the compressive strength evolution.
- Minor differences between the mechanical properties of heated CEMI and CEMIII concretes were observed. The bulk density values, as well as the mechanical properties fcT, ftT and ET, were very close or the differences were within the range of measurement error or the scatter of results of the properties tested;
- The nature of the aggregate has a dominant influence on the material physical density and mechanical properties of the tested concretes. The compressive and tensile strengths depend on the aggregate nature for temperature up to 400 °C; above this temperature level, similar values of strength are observed;
- The decrease in the mechanical properties is the result of progressive cement paste damage due to dehydration and chemical changes in the cement paste. Moreover, crack development due to the thermal mishmash of aggregate and cement paste results in nonlinear behavior of heated concretes;
- The course of changes of the relative value in the elastic modulus for all the concretes investigated was very similar, except for the temperature of 400 °C. The riverbed aggregate concretes RB CEMI and RB CEMIII hada lower damage parameter than that observed for basalt aggregate concretes (B CEMI and B CEMIII) at this temperature. For 200, 600, 800, and 1000 °C, the damage levels were similar;
- Important changes of up to six orders of magnitude were observed in permeability values following heating. However, the differences between the concretes could not be considered as significant. Indeed, CEMIII concretes presented slightly lower values of permeability in comparison with the CEMI ones in whole range of temperatures. On the other hand, basalt aggregate-based concretes have slightly lower permeability than riverbed ones. Concretes with CEMI: riverbed 1.2 × 10−17 vs. basalt 0.7 × 10−17; concretes with CEMIII: riverbed 0.99 × 10−17 vs. basalt CEMIII 0.53 × 10−17. That difference was be explained by lower permeability of basalt aggregate itself. This relation was also observed for the temperatures of 200, 400, and 600 °C;
- Analysis of the results allowed the formulation of the constitutive exponential law, presenting the relationship between the permeability of concrete and damage, which is valid up to 600 °C.
- It can be considered that heating induces damage, which may be represented by changes in the initial modulus of elasticity, that depends to a small degree on the type of cement. In this range of damage, the effects of aggregate type are also non-significant.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Component | CEMI 42.5 R | CEMIII/A 42.5 N |
---|---|---|
SiO2 | 18.6 | 30.0 |
Al2O3 | 5.3 | 6.2 |
Fe2O3 | 2.9 | 1.7 |
CaO | 62.7 | 50.3 |
MgO | 1.50 | 4.98 |
SO3 | 3.22 | 2.41 |
Na2O | 0.19 | 0.37 |
K2O | 0.96 | 0.70 |
eqNa2O | 0.82 | 0.83 |
Cl− | 0.060 | 0.016 |
Portland clinker content GGBFS Gypsum | 96 0 4 | 45 53 2 |
Parameter | CEMI 42.5 R | CEMIII/A 42.5 N |
---|---|---|
Specific area (Blaine method), m2/kg True density, g/cm3 | 340 3.09 | 465 2.97 |
Setting time, minutes -initial -final | 199 270 | 221 266 |
Parameters | CEMI 42.5 R | CEMIII/A 42.5 N |
---|---|---|
Compressive strength, MPa -after 2 days -after 28 days | 29.3 55.1 | 13.7 50.7 |
Concrete | Unit | B CEMI | B CEMIII | RB CEMI | RB CEMIII | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Component | ||||||
CEM I 42.5 R | kg/m3 | 482 | 482 | |||
CEM III/A 42.5 N | kg/m3 | 482 | 482 | |||
Water | dm3/m3 | 145 | ||||
w/c ratio | – | 0.30 | ||||
Riverbed quartz sand 0–2 mm RB, riverbed 2–8 mm RB, riverbed 8–16 mm B, basalt 2–8 mm B, basalt 8–16 mm | kg/m3 | 662 – – 709 648 | 662 – – 709 648 | 663 610 558 – – | 663 610 558 – – | |
Plasticizer BASF BV 18 Superplasticizer BASF Glenium SKY 591 | % mc | 0.90 2.20 | 0.90 2.35 | 0.90 2.20 | 0.90 2.35 | |
Cement paste content Mortar content Coarse aggregate content | dm3/m3 | 300 550 450 | ||||
Slump (consistency) | mm | 120–150 | ||||
Air content in concrete mix | % vol. | 1.7–2.0 |
Property | Unit | B CEMI | B CEMIII | RB CEMI | RB CEMIII |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
B Basalt Coarse Aggregate | RB Riverbed Coarse Aggregate | ||||
Bulk density ρo20°C | kg/m3 | 2558.8 | 2533.2 | 2300.7 | 2315.6 |
Compressive strength fc20°C | MPa | 84.9 | 96,2 | 77.0 | 87.4 |
Splitting tensile strength ft20°C | MPa | 6.2 | 6.9 | 6.0 | 5.6 |
Modulus of elasticity E20°C | GPa | 44.4 | 48.9 | 30.6 | 29.7 |
Permeability k20°C | m2 | 0.70 × 10−17 | 0.52 × 10−17 | 1.20 × 10−17 | 1.00 × 10−17 |
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Hager, I.; Tracz, T.; Choińska, M.; Mróz, K. Effect of Cement Type on the Mechanical Behavior and Permeability of Concrete Subjected to High Temperatures. Materials 2019, 12, 3021. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12183021
Hager I, Tracz T, Choińska M, Mróz K. Effect of Cement Type on the Mechanical Behavior and Permeability of Concrete Subjected to High Temperatures. Materials. 2019; 12(18):3021. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12183021
Chicago/Turabian StyleHager, Izabela, Tomasz Tracz, Marta Choińska, and Katarzyna Mróz. 2019. "Effect of Cement Type on the Mechanical Behavior and Permeability of Concrete Subjected to High Temperatures" Materials 12, no. 18: 3021. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12183021
APA StyleHager, I., Tracz, T., Choińska, M., & Mróz, K. (2019). Effect of Cement Type on the Mechanical Behavior and Permeability of Concrete Subjected to High Temperatures. Materials, 12(18), 3021. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma12183021