Abstract

Composite materials were created for usage as reinforcement and to protect the building envelope based on today's global conditions such as climate change. Composite materials were manufactured using phenol-formaldehyde resin (case of resol) as a matrix, carbon fiber as reinforcement (7.5%v/v), and perlite (10%w/w) as a low thermal conductivity component, to combine high mechanical properties with good heat resistance and good thermal insulation properties. The structure of these new materials was examined through scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and elemental analysis (SEM-EDS). The addition of perlite (10%w/w) in the resite matrix (without fibers) increased the flexural and shear strength of the composite materials. On the other hand, the composite materials with fiber reinforcement show that the perlite reduces the flexural and shear strength due to the additional interfaces which were created. During heat treatment at 473 K, carbon fibers had the smallest weight loss followed by perlite while the resite matrix (i.e., the cured resol) shows the greatest weight loss. It is noted that the role of perlite is to stabilize the mass of the resite matrix during heat treatment. The composite material with carbon fibers and perlite is a heat-resistant material with only 2% weight loss at 473 K for 1 hour and shows a low coefficient of thermal conductivity, making it a new material in the direction of heat-insulating materials.

Highlights

  • Considering it holistically, built heritage constitutes a living organism of global importance since it carries both the history of humanity and a landmark function for the future

  • The insulation and the reinforcement of the building envelope in a way that is compatible with traditional construction are set as top priorities [4], by bearing in mind that they are responsible for the energy loss and the stability of the structural system of historic buildings

  • The analysis focused at the rupture area of the composite material (Figure 3), in order to determine the role of the perlite and its dispersion percentage due to the additional interfaces that were created

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Considering it holistically, built heritage constitutes a living organism of global importance since it carries both the history of humanity and a landmark function for the future.

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call