Influence of Hydrated Lime on the Self-Healing Capacity of Cement Mortars

The capacity of hydrated lime to reabsorb CO2 as it hardens has made it a desirable replacement for cement to produce mortars with an overall lower environmental footprint. Still, research into lime-cement formulations remains limited, especially when it comes to their self-healing capacity. Some st...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giordano Franco Grosso, Boon Nico, De Belie Nele
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2023-01-01
Series:MATEC Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.matec-conferences.org/articles/matecconf/pdf/2023/05/matecconf_smartincs2023_02021.pdf
Description
Summary:The capacity of hydrated lime to reabsorb CO2 as it hardens has made it a desirable replacement for cement to produce mortars with an overall lower environmental footprint. Still, research into lime-cement formulations remains limited, especially when it comes to their self-healing capacity. Some studies show that hydrated lime can improve self-healing in cement mixes, but addition rates are low. Here we present how high lime-cement ratios influence the self-healing capacity of lime mortars. Four mixes of increasing lime-cement ratios were cracked with tensile loading and placed under 1 hour wet, 23 hours dry cycles to stimulate self-healing. The mix design of 50 % lime-50 % cement volume (L50C50) showed self-healing abilities and was tested against a pure cement mixture (L0C100). Microscopy and water flow tests were performed at a cracking age of 7 days and then again after 28 days of healing in three regimes. Overall, submersion was the best healing regime for both L0C100 and L50C50 and crack self-healing was close to total (100 ± 1 % and 98 ± 6 %, respectively). Nevertheless, the water flow tests show that self-healing in L50C50 was in fact less efficient than that of the L0C100, achieving a 39 ± 21 % reduction in water flow versus 86 ± 11 %.
ISSN:2261-236X