Durability and Property Study of Decade Old Crumb Rubber Concrete Cored Specimens.
Fuqiang DuanHan ZhuYasser E IbrahimMusa AdamuPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Crumb rubber concrete (CRC) is a concrete that contains rubber crumbs. This article presents a study of three experiments on long aged CRC specimens that were cored from a decade old CRC bridge deck in Tianjin, China. The three experimental tests conducted were: (1) the flexural stress-strain test on semi-circular disk specimens; (2) the accelerated steel-rebar corrosion test and (3) the carbonation test. In addition, the in situ carbonation test was also carried out on the CRC bridge deck. The flexural stress-strain test results showed that the CRC semi-circular disk specimens exhibited a ductile pattern and high-energy absorbing capacity with its flexural tensile strength being at 5 MPa and the flexural modulus of 10 GPa. The steel corrosion rust rate via the calculation of steel mass loss before and after the test in the accelerated steel-rebar corrosion test remained extremely low. The carbonation test results showed that in comparison with the prediction of two popular carbonation models, the carbonation in the CRC bridge deck took place at a much slower rate during the last 13 years. All of the results obtained in this study are reported for the first-time and indicate that these CRC cored specimens exhibit good mechanical properties and excellent durability characteristics after a decade in service, which may provide the technical knowledge for the possible future application of CRC in concrete constructions.
Keyphrases