Concrete exposed to cyclic freezing and thawing may deteriorate by surface scaling, internally developed cracks or both in combination. The rate of deterioration tends to be accelerated in concretes containing higher levels of supplementary cementitious materials including slag and limestone. A fundamental insight into the relationship between cement composition and freeze–thaw resistance is therefore imperative for developing durable composite cement concretes. Concrete samples prepared from CEM I, binary slag cements and ternary limestone slag cement blends at 0·5 w/b ratio without air entrainment were investigated. The freeze–thaw test was based on the CIF method according to PD CEN/TR 15177. Additionally, phase assemblages in the concretes before and after freeze–thaw damage were evaluated. Before freeze–thaw testing, compressive strengths were similar but the composite cements were slightly more susceptible to carbonation. However, the scaling and internal damage resistance decreased in the order of CEM I, binary and limestone ternary blended cements. The composition of the scaled material differed from the bulk, revealing an absence of portlandite and a marked reduction in AFm and ettringite contents. A probable explanation for the reduced freeze–thaw resistance includes the porosity differences and the lower portlandite content compared to CEM I concrete.
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September 2018
Research Article|
October 04 2017
Relationship between cement composition and the freeze–thaw resistance of concretes Available to Purchase
Samuel Adu-Amankwah;
Samuel Adu-Amankwah
Teaching Fellow, School of Civil Engineering, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK (corresponding author: s.adu-amankwah@leeds.ac.uk)
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Maciej Zajac;
Maciej Zajac
Senior Scientist, Heidelberg Technology Center GmbH, Leimen, Germany
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Jan Skocek;
Jan Skocek
Senior Scientist, Heidelberg Technology Center GmbH, Leimen, Germany
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Mohsen Ben Haha;
Mohsen Ben Haha
Principal Scientist, Heidelberg Technology Center GmbH, Leimen, Germany
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Leon Black
Leon Black
Professor of Infrastructure Materials, School of Civil Engineering, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
August 03 2017
Revision Received:
September 29 2017
Accepted:
September 29 2017
Online ISSN: 1751-7605
Print ISSN: 0951-7197
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2017
Advances in Cement Research (2018) 30 (8): 387–397.
Article history
Received:
August 03 2017
Revision Received:
September 29 2017
Accepted:
September 29 2017
Citation
Adu-Amankwah S, Zajac M, Skocek J, Ben Haha M, Black L (2018), "Relationship between cement composition and the freeze–thaw resistance of concretes". Advances in Cement Research, Vol. 30 No. 8 pp. 387–397, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/jadcr.17.00138
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