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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur R. E. Beddoe
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheEffect of moisture content of concrete on water uptake / P. Rucker-Gramm in Cement and concrete research, Vol. 40 N° 1 (Janvier 2010)
[article]
in Cement and concrete research > Vol. 40 N° 1 (Janvier 2010) . - pp. 102-108
Titre : Effect of moisture content of concrete on water uptake Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : P. Rucker-Gramm, Auteur ; R. E. Beddoe, Auteur Article en page(s) : pp. 102-108 Note générale : Génie Civil Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Water penetration Permeability Transport properties Index. décimale : 691 Matériaux de construction. Pièces et parties composantes Résumé : The penetration of water and non-polar hexane in Portland cement mortar prisms with different initial moisture contents was investigated using nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR). The amount of water in gel pores strongly affects the penetration of water in much larger capillary pores. Water penetration is reduced by the self-sealing effect as characterized by non-√t dependence of capillary uptake and penetration depth. This is explained by the ongoing redistribution of water from capillaries into gel pores which results in internal swelling and loss of continuity of the capillary pore system; a correlation was observed between the amount of redistributed water and departure from √t behaviour. A descriptive model is used to explain the dependence of water uptake and penetration on moisture content. For increasing initial moisture contents up to a critical value equivalent to equilibrium with a relative humidity between 65 and 80%, less penetrating water is able to redistribute. Thus more penetrating water is in larger capillaries with less viscous resistance; uptake and penetration depth increase. Above the critical initial moisture content, uptake and penetration depth decrease towards zero. This is explained by (a) an overall reduction in capillary pressure because transport takes places in fewer and larger pores and (b) an increase in viscous resistance due to the connection of penetrating capillary water with pores already containing water. Less capillary pore space is available for transport. The surface region of concrete placed in contact with water is not instantaneously saturated. Water content increases with time depending on the degree of surface saturation. A new transition coefficient for capillary suction γ is defined for the calculation of surface flux.
DEWEY : 620.13 ISSN : 0008-8846 En ligne : http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=PublicationURL&_tockey=%23TOC%235562%23 [...] [article] Effect of moisture content of concrete on water uptake [texte imprimé] / P. Rucker-Gramm, Auteur ; R. E. Beddoe, Auteur . - pp. 102-108.
Génie Civil
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Cement and concrete research > Vol. 40 N° 1 (Janvier 2010) . - pp. 102-108
Mots-clés : Water penetration Permeability Transport properties Index. décimale : 691 Matériaux de construction. Pièces et parties composantes Résumé : The penetration of water and non-polar hexane in Portland cement mortar prisms with different initial moisture contents was investigated using nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR). The amount of water in gel pores strongly affects the penetration of water in much larger capillary pores. Water penetration is reduced by the self-sealing effect as characterized by non-√t dependence of capillary uptake and penetration depth. This is explained by the ongoing redistribution of water from capillaries into gel pores which results in internal swelling and loss of continuity of the capillary pore system; a correlation was observed between the amount of redistributed water and departure from √t behaviour. A descriptive model is used to explain the dependence of water uptake and penetration on moisture content. For increasing initial moisture contents up to a critical value equivalent to equilibrium with a relative humidity between 65 and 80%, less penetrating water is able to redistribute. Thus more penetrating water is in larger capillaries with less viscous resistance; uptake and penetration depth increase. Above the critical initial moisture content, uptake and penetration depth decrease towards zero. This is explained by (a) an overall reduction in capillary pressure because transport takes places in fewer and larger pores and (b) an increase in viscous resistance due to the connection of penetrating capillary water with pores already containing water. Less capillary pore space is available for transport. The surface region of concrete placed in contact with water is not instantaneously saturated. Water content increases with time depending on the degree of surface saturation. A new transition coefficient for capillary suction γ is defined for the calculation of surface flux.
DEWEY : 620.13 ISSN : 0008-8846 En ligne : http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=PublicationURL&_tockey=%23TOC%235562%23 [...]