Abstract

Due to the detrimental effects of moisture in the built environment, there is a continuous interest in non-destructive experimental techniques that quantify and/or localise moisture in materials. Most existing experimental techniques, however, typically focus on macroscopic moisture contents in samples rather than the microscopic distribution of water in the individual pores of building materials. For the latter, a popular method such as X-ray computed tomography is not readily applicable, due to the gap between its spatial resolution limit and the typical pore sizes of building materials. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxometry is capable of measuring water in pores of both the nanometer and micrometer scale and is therefore an interesting possibility. While most NMR research focusses on water-saturated materials or overall moisture contents, this study determines the size distributions of the water islands in unsaturated materials with NMR, and compares results to X-ray computed tomography (XCT) images and pore network model (PNM) simulations. Results on unsaturated materials show that NMR focusses on the biggest water islands (i.e. in capillary filled pores) and disregards the hydrogen nuclei in smaller water islands (i.e. stored in pore corners). NMR relaxometry is therefore only adept at providing very rough estimates of the size of water-filled pores, especially since post-processing of the NMR experiments to obtain these water island size distributions involves a lot of uncertainty.

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