The paper presents results from two groups of experimental tests on a pressurised vascular self-healing cementitious material system, in which low viscosity cyanoacrylate was employed as the healing-agent. The first group comprised three series of tests on plain concrete notched prismatic beams. These tests examined the effects on the mechanical response of varying the healing period, the rate of loading and the healing-agent pressure. The second group involved two series of direct tension tests on doubly notched prismatic specimens, each of which had a different crack opening displacement during the healing period. In this second group of tests, healing was allowed to take place in cracks that were held stationary for a period of time, wit...
AbstractAutonomic self-healing cementitious materials generally rely upon the transport of adhesives...
Autonomic self-healing cementitious materials generally rely upon the transport of adhesives via cap...
Capillary flow through discrete cracks is the main mechanism by which healing agents embedded within...
The paper presents results from two groups of experimental tests on a pressurised vascular self-heal...
A series of characterisation studies are reported that provide new data on the behaviour of a self-h...
This paper presents the results of a series of self-healing experiments conducted on reinforced mort...
The success of self-healing cementitious materials relies on their ability to repeatedly heal over t...
A new model for simulating the transport of healing agents in self-healing (SH) cementitious materia...
This study presents a new 3D coupled model for simulating self-healing cementitious materials. The m...
A new damage-healing model for self-healing cementitious materials is described. The model is formul...
Recent developments in self-healing technology inspired by natural biological materials have the pot...
The paper discusses research progress on numerical models for self-healing cementitious materials (S...
A new approach is described for simulating self-healing behaviour in cementitious materials with a t...
AbstractAutonomic self-healing cementitious materials generally rely upon the transport of adhesives...
Autonomic self-healing cementitious materials generally rely upon the transport of adhesives via cap...
Capillary flow through discrete cracks is the main mechanism by which healing agents embedded within...
The paper presents results from two groups of experimental tests on a pressurised vascular self-heal...
A series of characterisation studies are reported that provide new data on the behaviour of a self-h...
This paper presents the results of a series of self-healing experiments conducted on reinforced mort...
The success of self-healing cementitious materials relies on their ability to repeatedly heal over t...
A new model for simulating the transport of healing agents in self-healing (SH) cementitious materia...
This study presents a new 3D coupled model for simulating self-healing cementitious materials. The m...
A new damage-healing model for self-healing cementitious materials is described. The model is formul...
Recent developments in self-healing technology inspired by natural biological materials have the pot...
The paper discusses research progress on numerical models for self-healing cementitious materials (S...
A new approach is described for simulating self-healing behaviour in cementitious materials with a t...
AbstractAutonomic self-healing cementitious materials generally rely upon the transport of adhesives...
Autonomic self-healing cementitious materials generally rely upon the transport of adhesives via cap...
Capillary flow through discrete cracks is the main mechanism by which healing agents embedded within...