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Evaluation of Methodologies for Assessing Self-Healing Performance of Concrete with Mineral Expansive Agents: An Interlaboratory Study

Self-healing concrete has the potential to optimise traditional design approaches; however, commercial uptake requires the ability to harmonize against standardized frameworks. Within EU SARCOS COST Action, different interlaboratory tests were executed on different self-healing techniques. This pape...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Litina, Chrysoula, Bumanis, Girts, Anglani, Giovanni, Dudek, Marta, Maddalena, Riccardo, Amenta, Maria, Papaioannou, Stamatoula, Pérez, Gloria, García Calvo, José Luis, Asensio, Eloy, Beltrán Cobos, Rubén, Tavares Pinto, Fabiano, Augonis, Algirdas, Davies, Robert, Guerrero, Ana, Sánchez Moreno, Mercedes, Stryszewska, Teresa, Karatasios, Ioannis, Tulliani, Jean-Marc, Antonaci, Paola, Bajare, Diana, Al-Tabbaa, Abir
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8072714/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33920620
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14082024
Descripción
Sumario:Self-healing concrete has the potential to optimise traditional design approaches; however, commercial uptake requires the ability to harmonize against standardized frameworks. Within EU SARCOS COST Action, different interlaboratory tests were executed on different self-healing techniques. This paper reports on the evaluation of the effectiveness of proposed experimental methodologies suited for self-healing concrete with expansive mineral additions. Concrete prisms and discs with MgO-based healing agents were produced and precracked. Water absorption and water flow tests were executed over a healing period spanning 6 months to assess the sealing efficiency, and the crack width reduction with time was monitored. High variability was reported for both reference (REF) and healing-addition (ADD) series affecting the reproducibility of cracking. However, within each lab, the crack width creation was repeatable. ADD reported larger crack widths. The latter influenced the observed healing making direct comparisons across labs prone to errors. Water absorption tests highlighted were susceptible to application errors. Concurrently, the potential of water flow tests as a facile method for assessment of healing performance was shown across all labs. Overall, the importance of repeatability and reproducibility of testing methods is highlighted in providing a sound basis for incorporation of self-healing concepts in practical applications.