Microstructure and moisture transport in carbonated cement-based materials incorporating cellulose nanofibrils

Open access
Date
2022-12Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
Carbonation of cement-based materials may lead to durability problems, so that it is necessary to find a way to reduce the effect of carbonation on concrete durability. This study investigated the effects of cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs) on the durability of carbonated cement-based materials. Two dosages of CNFs were used to prepare cement pastes and mortars. Before and after accelerated carbonation (4 % CO2 concentration and 57 % relative humidity), their microstructure, mineralogical composition, moisture retention capacity, drying kinetics, and water absorption were measured. Results show that the contents of hydration products (CH, C-S-H, and ettringite) slightly decrease with the increase of CNFs dosage. After carbonation, the carbonation ratios of hydration products decrease with CNFs dosage so that more hydration products remain in the carbonated materials. The calcite content was found to increase with the dosage of CNFs which may help the transformation of other metastable calcium carbonates to calcite. The coarsening effect of carbonation on pore structure was clearly observed in measured pore size distribution for all materials, while our results show that this effect is weakened by CNFs. Moisture transport is clearly accelerated by carbonation, but the acceleration rate is diminished with the increasing dosage of CNFs, suggesting that CNFs are able to reduce the microstructural damage by carbonation. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000572775Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Cement and Concrete ResearchVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
ElsevierSubject
Carbonation; Permeability; Water absorption; Cement hydration; DurabilityOrganisational unit
09593 - Angst, Ueli / Angst, Ueli
Funding
194812 - Enhanced Durability Predictions of Reinforced Concrete Exposed to Corrosive Environments (follow-up proposal) (SNF)
848794 - Towards mastering the long-standing challenge of ageing infrastructures in corrosive environments (EC)
SEED-21 21-1 - New precast pervious concrete pavers incorporated with demolition waste as efficient CO2 storage materials (ETHZ)
More
Show all metadata