Civil Engineering / İnşaat Mühendisliği

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/13

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  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 55
    Citation - Scopus: 64
    High-Early Ductile Cementitious Composites With Characteristics of Low Early-Age Shrinkage for Repair of Infrastructures
    (Springer Verlag, 2015) Şahmaran, Mustafa; Al-Emam, Muhannad; Yıldırım, Gürkan; Şimşek, Yunus Emre; Erdem, Tahir Kemal; Lachemi, Mohamed
    Reduced performance in concrete infrastructures is mainly caused by the formation of cracks, which may arise due to deteriorating mechanisms during service life. In most cases, reduced performance calls for urgent repairs to the degraded section. Therefore, it is highly desirable to develop dimensionally stable, ductile repair materials that can attain adequately high strength in a limited amount of time, compensate for significant deformation due to mechanical and environmental loadings, and prevent early-age shrinkage cracks. In this paper, the performance of such a material (high-early-strength engineered cementitious composites, HES-ECC, with very low early-age shrinkage capacity) was investigated by studying mechanical properties and dimensional stability. Composites were produced with different water to cementitious materials and slag to Portland cement ratios. In order to enhance composite properties in terms of ductility and early-age shrinkage characteristics, saturated lightweight aggregates replaced sand in the mixtures. The experimental results show that the majority of HES-ECC mixtures developed in this study attained compressive strength values of more than 20.0 MPa and minimum flexural strength of 6.0 MPa within 6 h. Moreover, the HES-ECC mixtures exhibited strain-hardening behavior with strain capacities comparable to normal strength ECC, as well as substantially reduced autogenous shrinkage strain, both of which are unlikely to trigger the formation of cracks in tension at early ages. The integration of these conflicting parameters suggests that HES-ECC can easily meet the need for fast and durable repairs.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 77
    Citation - Scopus: 93
    Improving the Workability and Rheological Properties of Engineered Cementitious Composites Using Factorial Experimental Design
    (Elsevier Ltd., 2013) Şahmaran, Mustafa; Bilici, Zafer; Özbay, Erdoğan; Erdem, Tahir Kemal; Yücel, Hasan Erhan; Lachemi, Mohamed
    In the development of Engineered Cementitious Composites (ECC), micromechanics-based design theory is adopted to properly select the matrix constituents, fiber, and fiber-matrix interface properties to exhibit strain hardening and multiple cracking behaviors. Despite the micromechanics design constraints, practical applications show that the workability and rheological properties of matrix can affect the fiber dispersion uniformity, which have also direct concerns on composite mechanical properties. For this reason, in this research, parameters of micromechanics-based optimized ECC mixture design, which most possibly affecting the workability and rheological properties, are investigated. An experimental program that contains 36 different ECC mixtures was undertaken to quantitatively evaluate the combined effects of the following factors on workability and rheological properties: water-binder (w/b), sand-binder (s/b), superplasticizer-binder (SP/b) ratios and maximum aggregate size (Dmax). A mini-slump cone, a Marsh cone and a rotational viscometer were used to evaluate the workability and rheological properties of ECC mixtures. Compressive strength and four point bending tests were used for mechanical characteristics of ECC mixtures at 28 days. The effects of studied parameters (w/b, s/b, SP/b and Dmax) were characterized and analyzed using regression models, which can identify the primary factors and their interactions on the measured properties. Statistically significant regression models were developed for all tested parameters as function of w/b, s/b, SP/b and Dmax. To find out the best possible ECC mixture under the range of parameters investigated for the desired workability and mechanical characteristics, a multi-objective optimization problem was defined and solved based on the developed regression models. Test results indicate that w/b, s/b and SP/b parameters affect the rheological and workability properties. On the other hand, for the range of studied aggregate sizes, Dmax is found to be statistically insignificant on the rheological and workability properties of ECC.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 47
    Citation - Scopus: 53
    Effect of Sustained Flexural Loading on Self-Healing of Engineered Cementitious Composites
    (Japan Concrete Institute, 2013) Özbay, Erdogan; Şahmaran, Mustafa; Yücel, Hasan Erhan; Erdem, Tahir Kemal; Lachemi, Mohamed; Li, Victor C.
    This paper aims to clarify the effects of sustained flexural loading on the self-healing behavior of Engineered Cementitious Composites (ECC). Prismatic specimens of ECC mixtures with two different levels of Class-F fly ash content were cast. Flexural loading was applied to the specimens at 28 days age to generate severe amount of microcracks. The specimens were then stored under continuous water or air exposures with or without sustained mechanical loading, for up to 90 days. For specimens under sustained mechanical loading, the applied sustained load level was 60% of the ultimate flexural strength. The extent of damage was determined as a percentage of loss in mechanical properties. The influences of different exposure regimes and sustained mechanical loading on mechanical properties of ECC mixtures were investigated. Microstructural changes within the microcracks were also analyzed.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 75
    Citation - Scopus: 87
    Use of Spent Foundry Sand and Fly Ash for the Development of Green Self-Consolidating Concrete
    (Springer Verlag, 2011) Şahmaran, Mustafa; Lachemi, Mohamed; Erdem, Tahir Kemal; Yücel, Hasan Erhan
    In the United States alone, the foundry industry discards up to 10 million tons of sand each year, offering up a plentiful potential resource to replace sand in concrete products. However, because the use of spent foundry sand (SFS) is currently very limited in the concrete industry, this study investigates whether SFS can successfully be used as a sand replacement material in cost-effective, green, self-consolidating concrete (SCC). In the study, SCC mixtures were developed to be even more inexpensive and environmentally friendly by incorporating Portland cement with fly ash (FA). Tests done on SCC mixtures to determine fresh properties (slump flow diameter, slump flow time, V-funnel flow time, yield stress, and relative viscosity), compressive strength, drying shrinkage and transport properties (rapid chloride permeability and volume of permeable pores) show that replacing up to 100% of sand with SFS and up to 70% Portland cement with FA enables the manufacture of green, lower cost SCC mixtures with proper fresh, mechanical and durability properties. The beneficial effects of FA compensate for some possible detrimental effects of SFS.