• Fast, automated, affordable test for cem

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Wed Jul 5 22:30:22 2023
    Fast, automated, affordable test for cement durability

    Date:
    July 5, 2023
    Source:
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, News Bureau
    Summary:
    Engineers have developed a new test that can predict the durability
    of cement in seconds to minutes -- rather than the hours it takes
    using current methods. The test measures the behavior of water
    droplets on cement surfaces using computer vision on a device that
    costs less than $200. The researchers said the new study could
    help the cement industry move toward rapid and automated quality
    control of their materials.


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    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Engineers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign have developed
    a new test that can predict the durability of cement in seconds to
    minutes -- rather than the hours it takes using current methods. The
    test measures the behavior of water droplets on cement surfaces using
    computer vision on a device that costs less than $200. The researchers
    said the new study could help the cement industry move toward rapid and automated quality control of their materials.

    The results of the study, led by Illinois civil and environmental
    engineering professor Nishant Garg, are reported in the journal npj
    Materials Degradation.

    "Concrete is one of the most consumed materials on our planet,
    second only to water," Garg said. "Over time, the concrete used to
    build our infrastructure degrades over time via exposure to deicing
    salts; freeze and thaw cycles; and ingress of water -- all of which
    can lead to corrosion of the rebar that is used to strengthen the
    structures. Ultimately, this leads to failure, sometimes catastrophically,
    as seen in the 2021 condominium collapse in Surfside, Florida, where 98
    lives were lost." One of the key tests used to predict the durability of cementitious systems is based on the ability of cement paste -- a mixture
    of cement-based binder and water -- to absorb water, Garg said. Water absorption is linked to cement's durability; the more porous the cement
    paste is, the more water it will absorb, ultimately leading to corrosion
    of the embedded rebar in reinforced concrete.

    A standard test, known as ASTM C1585, is performed in a lab by exposing
    a concrete sample that contains cement paste to water while a technician continuously measures the "sorptivity" -- or how much water the sample
    absorbs and transmits -- by observing its weight change for several hours,
    if not days.

    In the study, the new device predicts initial sorptivity using computer
    vision to see how quickly a single water droplet is absorbed into the
    surface within the first few seconds or minutes. Garg said the test is
    far less tedious than the current ASTM method and can be performed on
    the fly in the field or in the lab.

    "We performed the new test on more than 60 unique samples, and there's
    a fairly good correlation between our results and the results from the conventional ASTM test method," Garg said. "So we are now proposing
    our new testing method as an alternative to test the durability of
    cementitious systems in a few seconds." In addition to the importance
    of droplet absorption, the research team also learned that the initial
    angle at which water droplets come into contact with the cement surface matters, too.

    "The dynamics of absorption change quickly while the water droplets
    change shape on the surface," Garg said. "Intricacies like these are all factored into our new test." The team is currently working on ways to
    scale up the test for mortars and more varieties of concrete, which are texturally and chemically more complex.

    "The key takeaway from the study is that testing the durability of
    building materials is very slow, tedious and labor-intensive," Garg
    said. "With the availability of technologies like computer vision and
    analysis, we can develop tests that are faster, automated and convenient."
    The department of civil and environmental engineering at Illinois
    supported this research.

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    Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Illinois_at_Urbana-Champaign,_News_Bureau.

    Original written by Lois Yoksoulian. Note: Content may be edited for
    style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Hossein Kabir, Nishant Garg. Rapid prediction of cementitious
    initial
    sorptivity via surface wettability. npj Materials Degradation,
    2023; 7 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s41529-023-00371-4 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/07/230705105835.htm

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