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Influence of Cement Particle Size Distribution on Early Age Autogenous Strains and Stresses in Cement-Based Materials

Published

Author(s)

Dale P. Bentz, C Haecker, K K. Hansen, O M. Jensen, J F. Oleson, H S. Stang

Abstract

The influence of cement particle size distribution (PSD)on autogenous strains and stresses in cement pastes of identical water-to-cement ratio is examined for cement powders of four different finenesses. Experimental measurements include chemical shrinkage to quantify degree of hydration, internal relative humidity development, autogenous shrinkage, and eigenstress development using a novel embedded spherical stress sensor. Because the latter three measurements are conducted under sealed conditions, while chemical shrinkage measurements are made under
Citation
Journal of the American Ceramic Society
Volume
84
Issue
No. 1

Keywords

autogenous shrinkage, cement paste, eigenstress, hydration, particle size distribution, pore size distribution, relative humidity

Citation

Bentz, D. , Haecker, C. , Hansen, K. , Jensen, O. , Oleson, J. and Stang, H. (2001), Influence of Cement Particle Size Distribution on Early Age Autogenous Strains and Stresses in Cement-Based Materials, Journal of the American Ceramic Society, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=860231 (Accessed April 19, 2024)
Created January 1, 2001, Updated February 19, 2017