Abstract

Nowadays, strengthening and refurbishing of existing structures on urban areas has gained interest in order to reduce costs by avoiding both the use of construction raw materials and the disposal of construction and demolition waste on landfill. Usually, existing structures need to be locally demolished in order to replace either the existing corroded reinforcement or strengthen the existing structure. Among all the existing demolition methods, microwave and induction heating have been proven as a good alternative to generate a local damage with little noise and dust production, which is a desirable feature when structures are in urban areas. However, there is a lack of information about the behaviour of both damaging methods when steel fibre-reinforced concretes are involved. This paper studies the influence of the steel fibre addition on the damaging capacity of both microwave and induction heating demolition methods. For that purpose, mortars containing two different steel fibres (steel fibres used for concrete reinforcement and brass covered steel needles used for mortar reinforcement) were added in three different proportions (0%, 0.5% and 1% by unit volume of mortar) and exposed to up to 10 min of either microwave heating (0.003-0.03 W/mm3, 2.45 GHz) or induction heating (0.016-0.023 W/mm3, 18 kHz). With the aim of evaluating the damage caused by the heating methods, test specimens were visually checked, and mechanical properties were determined via flexural and compressive strength tests. According to the results, mortars exposed to either microwave or induction heating suffered a sudden, violent disintegration without noticing any previous damage on the mortar specimens. Results proved that pressure increment on water-saturated pores caused the failure no matter the fibre type used as a reinforcement. However, for microwave heating, the reflection of microwaves on the fibres tended to concentrate the heating effect on the specimen surface, resulting in higher surface temperatures, but lower damaging potential of the demolition method. Furthermore, similar failure mechanism was observed on oven-dried mortars exposed to microwave heating. Nevertheless, oven dried mortars exposed to induction heating suffered a highly variable, silent and controlled damage, presenting a highly varying quantity of fracture planes that decreased its flexural and compressive strengths by up to 38% and 31%, respectively.

Highlights

  • With the aim of reducing construction and material costs on the construction industry, reuse of old structures has gained interest

  • This paper studies the influence of the steel fibre addition on the damaging capacity of both microwave and induction heating demolition methods

  • The microwave walls were wet when the collapse of the REF1 mortars occurred, but dry when the M1.5 mortars were heated, which indicated that the main cause of the collapse for the REF1 mortars was the rise of the pore water pressure as there was a sudden release of water in the disaggregation process

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Summary

Introduction

With the aim of reducing construction and material costs on the construction industry, reuse of old structures has gained interest. Regarding induction heating technology, it is widely being studied as a healing mechanism on several bituminous materials by Norambuena-Contreras and co-workers [9], or as a non-destructive method to detect corroded rebars [10,11,12]. Lim and Lee [14] compared induction heating demolition method to other methods based on the mechanical dismantling of the reinforced-concrete structure. They concluded that induction heating is 12% more expensive and significantly slower than the conventional crushing methods, but they indicate that the generation of dust and pollutants is significantly reduced which could counterbalance, at least, the increase in cost. This paper analyses the effect of using microwave or induction heating technologies as a demolition process on steel fibre reinforced mortars. The paper analyses their influence on the mechanical properties of steel fibre reinforced cement mortars

Materials and methods
Low speed mixing with fibres: 2 min
Results and discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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