Inicio  /  Buildings  /  Vol: 12 Par: 6 (2022)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

CO2 Curing on the Mechanical Properties of Portland Cement Concrete

Yung-Chih Wang    
Ming-Gin Lee    
Wei-Chien Wang    
Yu-Cheng Kan    
Shih-Hsuan Kao and Hsien-Wen Chang    

Resumen

This study was to evaluate the CO2 curing on mechanical properties of Portland cement concrete. Three different specimen sizes (5 × 10 cm, 10 × 20 cm, and 15 × 30 cm cylinders), three CO2 concentrations (50%, 75%, 100%), three curing pressures (0.2, 0.4, 0.8 MPa), three curing times (1, 3, 6 h), two water cement ratios (0.41, 0.68) for normal and high-strength concretes, and two test ages (3, 28 days) were used for this investigation. Before using the CO2 curing process, the concrete samples reached the initial set at approximately 4 h, and the free water in the samples was gradually removed when dry CO2 gas was injected. The test results show that the 3-day early compressive strength of normal concrete cured by CO2 is higher than that of concrete cured by water, but the difference is not obvious for high-strength concrete cured by CO2. In addition, there is a size effect on the strength of the 5 × 10 cm and 15 × 30 cm cylinders, and the strength conversion factor ks5 value obtained for the 28-day compressive strength is greater than 1.18. Compared to conventional water-cured concrete, the elastic modulus of carbon dioxide-cured one generally increases in proportion to the square root of the 28-day compressive strength. It was observed that there are only minor differences in the four EC empirical equations obtained by CO2 curing from 5 × 10 cm and 10 × 20 cm cylinders, respectively.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Aghiad Alhafez, Shingo Miyazawa, Nobukazu Nito, Ryuichiroh Kuga and Etsuo Sakai    
Cement with fly ash has rarely been used in Japan, mainly because its strength development is slower than ordinary Portland cement. In this research, the effect of the new type of fly ash (which was modified by the electrostatic belt separation method) w... ver más
Revista: Infrastructures

 
Kiran Kumar Poloju, Shalini Annadurai, Ram Kishore Manchiryal, Mallikarjuna Rao Goriparthi, Prabu Baskar, Mayakrishnan Prabakaran and Jongpil Kim    
Concrete is a versatile construction material used along with a reinforcement. Concrete is made up of binder materials and aggregates. Cement is a primary binder material used to produce conventional concrete. Carbon dioxide emissions in the atmosphere a... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Yelbek Utepov, Assel Tulebekova, Aliya Aldungarova, Timoth Mkilima, Shyngys Zharassov, Zhanbolat Shakhmov, Daniyar Bazarbayev, Temirkhan Tolkynbayev and Zhanar Kaliyeva    
Concrete strength gain can be significantly affected by the initial characteristics of the raw materials. Unfortunately, information on the potential influence of the initial water pH on concrete strength gain is still scarce. In this study, the potentia... ver más
Revista: Infrastructures

 
Baoliang Li, Zhouyang Tang, Binbin Huo, Zejun Liu, Yongzhen Cheng, Baizhan Ding and Peng Zhang    
The hydration products and strength of cement pastes incorporated with ground blast furnace slag (GBFS) (0% and 20% replacement) have been investigated under steam curing condition (80 °C for 7 h and 7 d) in comparison with normal curing condition (moist... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Çaglar Yalçinkaya    
Hydroxypropyl Methylcellulose (HPMC) is one of the most frequently used viscosity modifying admixtures in 3D printable cement-based materials. In this study, the effects of HPMC dosage on the mechanical properties of 3D printable cement-based mortars wer... ver más
Revista: Buildings