Bibliography - D. J. Sweeney
- Ciardullo, J. P., D. J. Sweeney, and George Scherer, 2005: Thermal expansion kinetics: Method to measure permeability of cementitious materials: IV, Effect of thermal gradients and viscoelasticity. Journal of the American Ceramic Society, 88(5), doi:10.1111/j.1551-2916.2005.00214.x 1213-1221
[ Abstract ]When a porous material that is saturated with liquid is heated, the liquid expands
much more than the solid phase. If the permeability is low, then the liquid may not
be able to escape as it expands, so it expands within the pores and causes dilatation
of the body. In that case, by analyzing the kinetics of dilatation during a change in
temperature, it is possible to extract the permeability. Previous papers have
examined the behavior of an elastic or viscoelastic (VE) porous solid subjected to a
thermal cycle slow enough to avoid internal temperature gradients. However, for
cementitious samples, the sample size must be large enough that thermal gradients
are likely. In this paper, we show that the effect of the gradient can be readily
incorporated into the analysis of experimental data. For cement paste, experiments
reveal that VE relaxation has a greater influence on the results than the gradient in
temperature.
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