CO2 Curing on the Mechanical Properties of Portland Cement Concrete
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experiments
2.1. Concrete Materials and Mix Proportion
2.2. Concrete Samples
2.3. Concrete CO2 Curing Test
3. Experimental Results
3.1. Effect of CO2 Curing on Concrete Compressive Strength
3.2. Effect of CO2 Curing on Concrete Modulus of Elasticity
3.3. Effect of CO2 Curing on Rupture Modulus
3.4. Thermo-Gravimetric Analysis
3.5. XRD Analysis of Concrete Specimen
3.6. Carbonation Depth
4. Summary
- (1)
- The early 3-day compressive strength of CO2-cured concrete is higher than that of conventional water-cured concrete. When the age reaches 28 days and 90 days, the compressive strength of CO2-cured concrete is close to that of conventional water-cured concrete. The strength of normal and high-strength concretes increases with concrete age, regardless of CO2 concentration, duration, and pressure. The curing combination of 50-3-2 and 50-1-2 both won 3 first places in compressive strength, indicating that the CO2 pressurized 0.1 to 0.3 MPa concentration of 50%, and two hours of CO2-curing could get better strength.
- (2)
- A 5 × 10 cm cylinder of normal-strength or high-strength concrete is significantly stronger at each age than a 10 × 20 cm or 15 × 30 cm cylinder. Furthermore, the difference in strength between the 5 × 10 cm and 15 × 30 cm cylinders is large, with ks values as high as 1.18. However, the results showed no difference between 10 × 20 cm and 15 × 30 cm cylinders in normal strength concrete.
- (3)
- Compared with conventional water-cured concrete, the elastic modulus of carbon dioxide-cured concrete also increases continuously in proportion to the square root of the compressive strength. Choosing the most appropriate type of CO2 curing for fresh concrete will have a significant impact on the modulus of elasticity.
- (4)
- There is only a minor difference in four Ec empirical equations obtained from 5 × 10 cm or 10 × 20 cm cylinders by CO2 or water curing, whereas the 10 × 20 cm cylinders obtained larger elastic modulus coefficients. The average COVs of the elastic modulus Ec from 5 × 10 cm and 10 × 20 cm cylinders are 10.1% and 9.2%, respectively.
- (5)
- The results of neutralization depth showed that the highest neutralization depth of carbon curing specimen only penetrated 1.71 mm, and the degree of neutralization was 6.68%. This also shows that the chromatograms of the seven CO2-cured samples are very similar, and there is no obvious difference due to the low neutralization degree.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Advantages of Concrete CO2 Curing | Disadvantages of Concrete CO2 Curing |
---|---|
1. Fast strength gain. 2. A stable solid product is produced due to the carbonization process. 3. CO2 is an important greenhouse gas and its use in concrete curing consumes and reduces the carbon content of the atmosphere. 4. Reduction of porosity, permeability, and ettringite formation. 5. Increased resistance to external sodium and magnesium sulfate, acid attack. 6. Increased the resistance to attack by weathering carbonation, damage from freeze–thaw, and drying shrinkage. 7. Reduce chloride ions penetration. | 1.The reaction of CO2 with the concrete elements lowers the pH value. Therefore, it may cause corrosion of steel bars in reinforced concrete. 2.For precast units only and not suitable for reinforced structure. |
Mix Proportion | W/C | Cement | Aggregate | Sand | Water |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Normal concrete | 0.68 | 302 | 885 | 1021 | 205 |
High-strength concrete | 0.41 | 500 | 885 | 881 | 205 |
Water–Cement Ratio | Pressure (MPa) | CO2 (%) | Time (Hour) |
---|---|---|---|
Normal concrete (0.68) High-strength concrete (0.41) | 0.2 0.4 0.8 | 50 75 100 | 1 3 6 |
Age of Hardening | Specimen ID | Φ5 × 10 | Specimen ID | Φ10 × 20 | Specimen ID | Φ15 × 30 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3-day Strength | 50-1-2 | 16.82 | 100-6-4 | 15.40 | 50-1-2 | 16.15 |
100-6-4 | 15.41 | 100-1-2 | 14.66 | 50-1-4 | 15.27 | |
100-1-2 | 15.35 | 75-3-4 | 14.19 | 100-6-4 | 15.00 | |
CL | 12.34 | CL | 12.49 | CL | 12.59 | |
7-day Strength | 100-6-2 | 22.93 | 50-3-2 | 24.24 | 50-3-2 | 22.61 |
50-3-2 | 22.20 | 100-1-2 | 21.81 | 50-1-2 | 22.59 | |
100-6-4 | 21.97 | 75-6-2 | 21.12 | 100-1-2 | 21.55 | |
CL | 19.33 | CL | 15.90 | CL | 16.42 | |
28-day Strength | 50-1-2 | 36.05 | 75-6-2 | 29.45 | 50-3-2 | 30.15 |
50-3-2 | 34.23 | 50-6-2 | 28.95 | 50-3-4 | 29.83 | |
75-1-4 | 32.22 | 50-3-2 | 28.94 | 50-1-2 | 28.71 | |
CL | 31.58 | 75-3-2 | 27.65 | 100-1-2 | 26.73 | |
90-day Strength | L-50-1-2 | 40.95 | L-50-3-2 | 36.62 | L-50-1-2 | 33.52 |
L-100-1-2 | 39.16 | L-100-6-2 | 36.49 | L-100-6-2 | 33.26 | |
L-100-6-2 | 38.49 | L-75-3-4 | 36.13 | L-100-1-2 | 33.22 | |
CL | 34.06 | CL | 30.02 | CL | 30.12 |
Type of Concrete/Age | Φ5 × 10 cm | Φ10 × 20 cm | Φ15 × 30 cm | ks5(fc5/fc15), ks10(fc10/fc15) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Normal concrete/3 day | 12.34 | 12.49 | 12.53 | 0.98, 0.99 |
Normal concrete/7 day | 19.33 | 15.90 | 16.42 | 1.18, 0.97 |
Normal concrete/28 day | 31.59 | 27.65 | 26.73 | 1.18, 1.03 |
Normal concrete/90 day | 34.06 | 30.02 | 30.12 | 1.13, 1.00 |
High strength concrete/3 day | 31.70 | 29.59 | 31.29 | 1.01, 0.95 |
High strength concrete/7 day | 45.80 | 41.46 | 41.72 | 1.10, 0.99 |
High strength concrete/28 day | 55.60 | 53.58 | 48.64 | 1.14, 1.10 |
High strength concrete/90 day | 65.43 | 53.78 | 56.20 | 1.16, 0.96 |
Cylinder Size + Curing | Empirical Equation | Standard Deviation | COV (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Φ5×10 cm + CO2 Cured | Ec = 3498.5(f ′c) 0.5 | 322.8 | 9.2 |
Φ5×10 cm + H2O Cured | Ec = 3536.6(f ′c) 0.5 | 385.3 | 10.9 |
Φ10×20 cm + CO2 Cured | Ec = 3704.8(f ′c) 0.5 | 405.8 | 10.9 |
Φ10×20 cm + H2O Cured | Ec = 3673.1(f ′c) 0.5 | 273.6 | 7.5 |
ACI 318 empirical equation | Ec = 3750 (f ′c) 0.5 recommend for use in Taiwan. |
Specimen ID | P | L | b | d | R (Rupture Moduli) | f′c | K | √f′c | K(Average) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CH (water curing) | 4505.2 | 50 | 15 | 15 | 6.54 | 45.55 | 3.10 | 6.75 | 2.92 |
3984.38 | 5.79 | 2.74 | |||||||
4183.26 | 6.08 | 2.88 | |||||||
4293.79 | 6.23 | 2.95 | |||||||
H-100-6-4 (CO2 curing) | 3972.82 | 50 | 15 | 15 | 5.77 | 46.17 | 2.71 | 6.79 | 2.95 |
3714.49 | 5.40 | 2.54 | |||||||
4733.96 | 6.88 | 3.23 | |||||||
4888.19 | 7.10 | 3.34 |
Specimen ID | 650 °C (%) | 900 °C (%) | 650~900 °C (%) |
---|---|---|---|
CL (water curing) | 92.92 | 89.74 | 3.18 |
L-50-1-4 | 93.54 | 91.21 | 2.33 |
L-50-6-8 | 94.59 | 92.27 | 2.32 |
L-50-6-4 | 93.8 | 91.58 | 2.22 |
L-50-6-2 | 93.86 | 91.8 | 2.06 |
L-100-6-4 | 95.13 | 93.27 | 1.86 |
L-100-6-2 | 93.41 | 91.64 | 1.77 |
Specimen ID | Carbonation Depth (mm) | Neutralization Degree (%) |
---|---|---|
L-50-6-8 | 1.71 | 6.68 |
L-75-3-4 | 1.36 | 5.38 |
L-100-3-4 | 1.35 | 5.33 |
L-75-3-2 | 1.29 | 5.03 |
L-75-6-4 | 1.22 | 4.67 |
CL (water curing) | 0.00 | 0.00 |
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Wang, Y.-C.; Lee, M.-G.; Wang, W.-C.; Kan, Y.-C.; Kao, S.-H.; Chang, H.-W. CO2 Curing on the Mechanical Properties of Portland Cement Concrete. Buildings 2022, 12, 817. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12060817
Wang Y-C, Lee M-G, Wang W-C, Kan Y-C, Kao S-H, Chang H-W. CO2 Curing on the Mechanical Properties of Portland Cement Concrete. Buildings. 2022; 12(6):817. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12060817
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Yung-Chih, Ming-Gin Lee, Wei-Chien Wang, Yu-Cheng Kan, Shih-Hsuan Kao, and Hsien-Wen Chang. 2022. "CO2 Curing on the Mechanical Properties of Portland Cement Concrete" Buildings 12, no. 6: 817. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12060817
APA StyleWang, Y. -C., Lee, M. -G., Wang, W. -C., Kan, Y. -C., Kao, S. -H., & Chang, H. -W. (2022). CO2 Curing on the Mechanical Properties of Portland Cement Concrete. Buildings, 12(6), 817. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings12060817