4.6 Article

Development of engineered cementitious composites with limestone powder and blast furnace slag

Journal

MATERIALS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 43, Issue 6, Pages 803-814

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1617/s11527-009-9549-0

Keywords

Engineered cementitious composites; Tensile strain capacity; Limestone powder; Blast furnace slag; Blast furnace cement

Funding

  1. Delft Clusters and Heijmans Infrastructure
  2. US National Science Foundation [OCI 0636300]

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Nowadays limestone powder and blast furnace slag (BFS) are widely used in concrete as blended materials in cement. The replacement of Portland cement by limestone powder and BFS can lower the cost and enhance the greenness of concrete, since the production of these two materials needs less energy and causes less CO(2) emission than Portland cement. Moreover, the use of limestone powder and BFS improves the properties of fresh and hardened concrete, such as workability and durability. Engineered cementitious composites (ECC) is a class of ultra ductile fiber reinforced cementitious composites, characterized by high ductility, tight crack width control and relatively low fiber content. The limestone powder and BFS are used to produce ECC in this research. The mix proportion is designed experimentally by adjusting the amount of limestone powder and BFS, accompanied by four-point bending test and uniaxial tensile test. This study results in an ECC mix proportion with the Portland cement content as low as 15% of powder by weight. This mixture, at 28 days, exhibits a high tensile strain capacity of 3.3%, a tight crack width of 57 mu m and a moderate compressive strength of 38 MPa. In order to promote a wide use of ECC, it was tried to simplify the mixing of ECC with only two matrix materials, i.e. BFS cement and limestone powder, instead of three matrix materials. By replacing Portland cement and BFS in the aforementioned ECC mixture with BFS cement, the ECC with BFS cement and limestone powder exhibits a tensile strain capacity of 3.1%, a crack width of 76 mu m and a compressive strength of 40 MPa after 28 days of curing.

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