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¶ Introduction:
University
of Michigan,
U.S.A has developed
a new material
called “Self-healing Concrete” ;
which can heal itself when it cracks. No human intervention is
necessary—just
water and carbon dioxide.
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A
paper (titled “Autogenous
healing of engineered
cementitous composites under wet-dry cycles.”)
about the material has been
published online (March’09) in Cement
and
Concrete Research.
It will be printed in a forthcoming edition of the journal (Volume
39, Issue 5 :May 2009).
“It’s like if
you get a small cut on your hand, your body can heal itself. But if you
have a
large wound, your body needs help. You might need stitches.
We’ve created a
material with such tiny crack widths that it takes care of the healing
by
itself. Even if you overload it, the cracks stay small,”
said Professor Victor
Li (who led the research), the E. Benjamin Wylie
Collegiate Professor of Civil
Engineering and a professor of Materials Science and
Engineering.
A handful of
drizzly days would be enough to mend a damaged bridge made of the new
substance!.
¶ What
makes Self-healing
Concrete possible?
Self-healing
is possible because the material
is designed to bend and crack in narrow
hairlines rather than break and split in wide gaps, as
traditional concrete
behaves. The average
crack width in Li’s self-healing concrete is below 60
micrometers. That’s about half the width of a human hair.
His
recipe ensures
that extra dry cement in
the concrete exposed on the crack surfaces can react
with water and carbon dioxide to heal and form a thin white scar of
calcium
carbonate. Calcium carbonate is a strong compound found
naturally in seashells.
In the lab, the material requires between one and five cycles of
wetting and
drying to heal.
To
test the
healed concrete, the researchers used resonant frequency measurements
to
determine the stiffness and strength before and after inducing the
cracks.
These tests send sound waves through the material to detect changes in
its
structure.
¶ Details
of Lab
tests:
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| Self-healing
concrete works because it can bend. When it's strained, many
microcracks form
instead of one large crack that causes it to fail. Here, a specimen is
bending
as a force of five percent tensile strain is being applied. Regular
concrete
would fail at .01 percent tensile strain. (Credit:
Nicole
Casal Moore)
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In Li’s lab,
self-healed specimens recovered most if not all of their original
strength
after researchers
subjected them to a 3 percent tensile strain. That means
they
stretched the specimens to 3 percent beyond their initial size.
It’s the
equivalent of stretching a 100-foot piece an extra three
feet—enough strain to
severely deform metal or catastrophically fracture traditional concrete.
“We
found, to
our happy surprise, that when we load it again after it heals, it
behaves just
like new, with practically the same stiffness and strength,”
Li said.
“Self-healing
of crack damage recovers any stiffness lost when the material was
damaged and returns it to its pristine state. The
material can be
damaged and still remain safe to load.”
The
engineers
found that cracks must
be kept below 150 micrometers, and preferably below 50,
for full healing. To accomplish this, Li and his team
improved the bendable Engineered
Cement composite, or ECC, they’ve been
developing for the past 15
years.
More
flexible
than traditional concrete, ECC
acts more like metal than glass. Traditional
concrete is considered a ceramic. Brittle and rigid, it
can suffer catastrophic
failure when strained in an earthquake or by routine overuse, Li said. But
flexible ECC bends without breaking. It is studded with specially-coated
reinforcing fibers that hold it together. ECC remains intact and safe to
use at tensile strains up to 5 percent. Traditional concrete fractures
and
can’t carry a load at .01 percent tensile strain.
¶ Potentialities:
Today,
builders reinforce concrete structures with steel bars to keep cracks
as small
as possible. But they’re not small enough to heal, so water
and deicing salts
can penetrate to the steel, causing corrosion that further weakens the
structure. Li’s self-healing concrete needs no steel
reinforcement to keep crack
width tight, so it eliminates corrosion.
The
professor
says this new substance could
make infrastructure safer and more durable. By
reversing the typical deterioration process, the concrete could reduce
the cost
and environmental impacts of making new structures. And repairs would
last
longer.
“Our hope is
that when we rebuild our roads and bridges, we do it right, so that
this
transportation infrastructure does not have to undergo the expensive
repair and
rebuilding process again in another five to 10 years,”
Li said. “Also,
rebuilding with self-healing bendable concrete would allow a more harmonious
relationship between the built and natural environments by reducing the
energy
and carbon footprints of these infrastructure. As civil
and environmental
engineers, we are stewards of these mega-systems. Advanced materials
technology
is one means to keep them healthy.”
This
research
is funded by the National Science Foundation and a China National
Scholarship.
Li will give a keynote address on self-healing concrete at the International
Conference on Self-Healing Materials in Chicago
in June 2009. The University is pursuing patent protection for the
intellectual
property, and is seeking commercialization partners to help bring the
technology to market.