Technical Papers
Dec 7, 2012

Multiscale Chemico-Thermo-Hydro-Mechanical Modeling of Early-Stage Hydration and Shrinkage of Cement Compounds

Publication: Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering
Volume 25, Issue 9

Abstract

The early-stage cement hydration is critical to the strength and durability of cement-based materials. Due to the complex processes involved, holistic multiphysics and multiscale simulation is challenging. This paper introduces the concept of a water characteristic curve (WCC) used in unsaturated soils to cement-based materials. The WCC characterizes the internal structure of cement and essentially relates the pore morphology and physical chemistry of solid-liquid interface in microscale to the concepts of suction and water content in macroscale. A thermo-hydro-mechanical model was developed based on this multiscale technique. A modified Fourier’s heat equation for the thermal field, a modified Richard’s equation for the hydraulic field, and an extended Navier’s equation for the mechanical field were employed for developing the theoretical multiphysics framework. Auxiliary relationships, e.g., temperature-induced flow and chemical-reaction information of cement components, were adopted for the completeness of the formulation. This simulation framework was implemented with the finite-element method. Phenomena such as shrinkage, which is typical of early-stage cement hydration process, were reproduced. The methodology of this model provides a solid cornerstone for the simulation-based prediction of concrete performance.

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Information & Authors

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Published In

Go to Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering
Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering
Volume 25Issue 9September 2013
Pages: 1239 - 1247

History

Received: Apr 15, 2012
Accepted: Dec 5, 2012
Published online: Dec 7, 2012
Discussion open until: May 7, 2013
Published in print: Sep 1, 2013

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Authors

Affiliations

S.M.ASCE
Graduate Assistant, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Case Western Reserve Univ., 2104 Adelbert Rd., Bingham 256, Cleveland, OH 44106-7201. E-mail: [email protected]
M.ASCE
Associate Professor, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Case Western Reserve Univ., 2104 Adelbert Rd., Bingham 206, Cleveland, OH 44106-7201 (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]

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