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Embedded NMR Sensor to Monitor Compressive Strength Development and Pore Size Distribution in Hydrating Concrete

In cement-based materials porosity plays an important role in determining their mechanical and transport properties. This paper describes an improved low–cost embeddable miniature NMR sensor capable of non-destructively measuring evaporable water loss and porosity refinement in low and high water-to...

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Autores principales: Díaz-Díaz, Floriberto, de J. Cano-Barrita, Prisciliano F., Balcom, Bruce J., Solís-Nájera, Sergio E., Rodríguez, Alfredo O.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3892876/
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s131215985
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author Díaz-Díaz, Floriberto
de J. Cano-Barrita, Prisciliano F.
Balcom, Bruce J.
Solís-Nájera, Sergio E.
Rodríguez, Alfredo O.
author_facet Díaz-Díaz, Floriberto
de J. Cano-Barrita, Prisciliano F.
Balcom, Bruce J.
Solís-Nájera, Sergio E.
Rodríguez, Alfredo O.
author_sort Díaz-Díaz, Floriberto
collection PubMed
description In cement-based materials porosity plays an important role in determining their mechanical and transport properties. This paper describes an improved low–cost embeddable miniature NMR sensor capable of non-destructively measuring evaporable water loss and porosity refinement in low and high water-to-cement ratio cement-based materials. The sensor consists of two NdFeB magnets having their North and South poles facing each other, separated by 7 mm to allow space for a Faraday cage containing a Teflon tube and an ellipsoidal RF coil. To account for magnetic field changes due to temperature variations, and/or the presence of steel rebars, or frequency variation due to sample impedance, an external tuning circuit was employed. The sensor performance was evaluated by analyzing the transverse magnetization decay obtained with a CPMG measurement from different materials, such as a polymer phantom, fresh white and grey cement pastes with different w/c ratios and concrete with low (0.30) and high (0.6) w/c ratios. The results indicated that the sensor is capable of detecting changes in water content in fresh cement pastes and porosity refinement caused by cement hydration in hardened materials, even if they are prepared with a low w/c ratio (w/c = 0.30). The short lifetime component of the transverse relaxation rate is directly proportional to the compressive strength of concrete determined by destructive testing. The r(2) (0.97) from the linear relationship observed is similar to that obtained using T(2) data from a commercial Oxford Instruments 12.9 MHz spectrometer.
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spelling pubmed-38928762014-01-16 Embedded NMR Sensor to Monitor Compressive Strength Development and Pore Size Distribution in Hydrating Concrete Díaz-Díaz, Floriberto de J. Cano-Barrita, Prisciliano F. Balcom, Bruce J. Solís-Nájera, Sergio E. Rodríguez, Alfredo O. Sensors (Basel) Article In cement-based materials porosity plays an important role in determining their mechanical and transport properties. This paper describes an improved low–cost embeddable miniature NMR sensor capable of non-destructively measuring evaporable water loss and porosity refinement in low and high water-to-cement ratio cement-based materials. The sensor consists of two NdFeB magnets having their North and South poles facing each other, separated by 7 mm to allow space for a Faraday cage containing a Teflon tube and an ellipsoidal RF coil. To account for magnetic field changes due to temperature variations, and/or the presence of steel rebars, or frequency variation due to sample impedance, an external tuning circuit was employed. The sensor performance was evaluated by analyzing the transverse magnetization decay obtained with a CPMG measurement from different materials, such as a polymer phantom, fresh white and grey cement pastes with different w/c ratios and concrete with low (0.30) and high (0.6) w/c ratios. The results indicated that the sensor is capable of detecting changes in water content in fresh cement pastes and porosity refinement caused by cement hydration in hardened materials, even if they are prepared with a low w/c ratio (w/c = 0.30). The short lifetime component of the transverse relaxation rate is directly proportional to the compressive strength of concrete determined by destructive testing. The r(2) (0.97) from the linear relationship observed is similar to that obtained using T(2) data from a commercial Oxford Instruments 12.9 MHz spectrometer. Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2013-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3892876/ http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s131215985 Text en © 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Díaz-Díaz, Floriberto
de J. Cano-Barrita, Prisciliano F.
Balcom, Bruce J.
Solís-Nájera, Sergio E.
Rodríguez, Alfredo O.
Embedded NMR Sensor to Monitor Compressive Strength Development and Pore Size Distribution in Hydrating Concrete
title Embedded NMR Sensor to Monitor Compressive Strength Development and Pore Size Distribution in Hydrating Concrete
title_full Embedded NMR Sensor to Monitor Compressive Strength Development and Pore Size Distribution in Hydrating Concrete
title_fullStr Embedded NMR Sensor to Monitor Compressive Strength Development and Pore Size Distribution in Hydrating Concrete
title_full_unstemmed Embedded NMR Sensor to Monitor Compressive Strength Development and Pore Size Distribution in Hydrating Concrete
title_short Embedded NMR Sensor to Monitor Compressive Strength Development and Pore Size Distribution in Hydrating Concrete
title_sort embedded nmr sensor to monitor compressive strength development and pore size distribution in hydrating concrete
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3892876/
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s131215985
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