AbstractCement-based materials often display an extraordinarily pronounced hysteresis of water sorption isotherms, even at low vapor pressures. This hysteresis is reflected in the volume change of the solid skeleton. To explain these observations, we propose a simple mechanism based on strong capillary forces in slit pores. Condensed water can exert capillary forces that change the volume of pores which are embedded in elastic solids. A macroscopic model predicts a pronounced sorption hysteresis for soft materials with narrow slit-shaped pores. The proposed mechanism can also be the origin of hysteresis in more rigid materials such as hardened cement pastes, which have a large fraction of micropores
Sorptivity is broadly used for characterising the pore connectivity of cementitious materials, with ...
International audienceThe aim of this work is to describe a method based on a simple representation ...
The sorption–desorption hysteresis observed in many nanoporous solids, at vapor pressures low enough...
Shrinkage can be critical for the strength and durability of drying cement pastes. Shrinkage becomes...
Cement paste has a complex distribution of pores and molecular-scale spaces. This distribution contr...
Cement paste has a complex distribution of pores and molecular-scale spaces. This distribution contr...
Cement paste has a complex distribution of pores and molecular-scale spaces. This distribution contr...
Abstract: Motivated by the puzzle of sorption hysteresis in Portland cement concrete or cement paste...
Humidity-dependent closing and reopening slit pores can produce hysteresis loops in sorption diagram...
Motivated by the puzzle of sorption hysteresis in Portland cement concrete or cement paste, we devel...
Water uptake by capillarity is widely used for characterising the durability properties of building ...
International audienceCapillary effects, such as imbibition drying cycles, impact the mechanics of g...
The traditional approach for evaluating capillary imbibition, which describes the phenomena as a lin...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, 2019Cataloged from PDF...
The constitutive models of concrete often consider water desorption isotherms to be near-equilibrium...
Sorptivity is broadly used for characterising the pore connectivity of cementitious materials, with ...
International audienceThe aim of this work is to describe a method based on a simple representation ...
The sorption–desorption hysteresis observed in many nanoporous solids, at vapor pressures low enough...
Shrinkage can be critical for the strength and durability of drying cement pastes. Shrinkage becomes...
Cement paste has a complex distribution of pores and molecular-scale spaces. This distribution contr...
Cement paste has a complex distribution of pores and molecular-scale spaces. This distribution contr...
Cement paste has a complex distribution of pores and molecular-scale spaces. This distribution contr...
Abstract: Motivated by the puzzle of sorption hysteresis in Portland cement concrete or cement paste...
Humidity-dependent closing and reopening slit pores can produce hysteresis loops in sorption diagram...
Motivated by the puzzle of sorption hysteresis in Portland cement concrete or cement paste, we devel...
Water uptake by capillarity is widely used for characterising the durability properties of building ...
International audienceCapillary effects, such as imbibition drying cycles, impact the mechanics of g...
The traditional approach for evaluating capillary imbibition, which describes the phenomena as a lin...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Physics, 2019Cataloged from PDF...
The constitutive models of concrete often consider water desorption isotherms to be near-equilibrium...
Sorptivity is broadly used for characterising the pore connectivity of cementitious materials, with ...
International audienceThe aim of this work is to describe a method based on a simple representation ...
The sorption–desorption hysteresis observed in many nanoporous solids, at vapor pressures low enough...