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    Downscaling Based Identification of Nonaging Power-Law Creep of Cement Hydrates

    Source: Journal of Engineering Mechanics:;2016:;Volume ( 142 ):;issue: 012
    Author:
    Markus Königsberger
    ,
    Muhammad Irfan-ul-Hassan
    ,
    Bernhard Pichler
    ,
    Christian Hellmich
    DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)EM.1943-7889.0001169
    Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
    Abstract: Creep of cementitious materials results from the viscoelastic behavior of the reaction products of cement and water, called hydrates. In the present paper, a single isochoric creep function characterizing well-saturated portland cement hydrates is identified through downscaling of 500 different nonaging creep functions derived from three-minute-long tests on differently young cement pastes with three different initial water-to-cement mass ratios. A two-scale micromechanics representation of cement paste is used for downscaling. At a scale of 700 microns, spherical clinker inclusions are embedded in a continuous hydrate foam matrix. The latter is resolved, at the smaller scale of 20 microns, as a highly disordered arrangement of isotropically oriented hydrate needles, which are interacting with spherical water and air pores. Homogenization of viscoelastic properties is based on the correspondence principle, involving transformation of the time-dependent multiscale problem to the Laplace-Carson space, followed by quasi-elastic upscaling and numerical back-transformation. With water, air, and clinker behaving elastically according to well-accepted published data, the hydrates indeed show one single power-law-type creep behavior with a creep exponent being surprisingly close to those found for the different cement pastes tested. The general validity of the identified hydrate creep properties is further corroborated by using them for predicting the creep performance of a 30-year-old cement paste in a creep test lasting 30 days: the respective model predictions agree very well with results from creep experiments published in the open literature.
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      Downscaling Based Identification of Nonaging Power-Law Creep of Cement Hydrates

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    contributor authorMarkus Königsberger
    contributor authorMuhammad Irfan-ul-Hassan
    contributor authorBernhard Pichler
    contributor authorChristian Hellmich
    date accessioned2017-12-16T09:15:21Z
    date available2017-12-16T09:15:21Z
    date issued2016
    identifier other%28ASCE%29EM.1943-7889.0001169.pdf
    identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4240569
    description abstractCreep of cementitious materials results from the viscoelastic behavior of the reaction products of cement and water, called hydrates. In the present paper, a single isochoric creep function characterizing well-saturated portland cement hydrates is identified through downscaling of 500 different nonaging creep functions derived from three-minute-long tests on differently young cement pastes with three different initial water-to-cement mass ratios. A two-scale micromechanics representation of cement paste is used for downscaling. At a scale of 700 microns, spherical clinker inclusions are embedded in a continuous hydrate foam matrix. The latter is resolved, at the smaller scale of 20 microns, as a highly disordered arrangement of isotropically oriented hydrate needles, which are interacting with spherical water and air pores. Homogenization of viscoelastic properties is based on the correspondence principle, involving transformation of the time-dependent multiscale problem to the Laplace-Carson space, followed by quasi-elastic upscaling and numerical back-transformation. With water, air, and clinker behaving elastically according to well-accepted published data, the hydrates indeed show one single power-law-type creep behavior with a creep exponent being surprisingly close to those found for the different cement pastes tested. The general validity of the identified hydrate creep properties is further corroborated by using them for predicting the creep performance of a 30-year-old cement paste in a creep test lasting 30 days: the respective model predictions agree very well with results from creep experiments published in the open literature.
    publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
    titleDownscaling Based Identification of Nonaging Power-Law Creep of Cement Hydrates
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume142
    journal issue12
    journal titleJournal of Engineering Mechanics
    identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)EM.1943-7889.0001169
    treeJournal of Engineering Mechanics:;2016:;Volume ( 142 ):;issue: 012
    contenttypeFulltext
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