Abstract

The reuse of construction and demolition waste as a substitute for natural coarse aggregate in the production of recycled concrete has been widely used. In order to study the capillary water absorption performance of waterborne-polyurethane-modified recycled aggregate concrete (WPUMRC), the effects of different curing systems, polymer-cement ratios, and waterborne polyurethane addition methods on the cumulative water absorption and the rate of capillary water absorption of WPUMRC were analyzed, and through MIP tests, the micro modification mechanism of waterborne polyurethane in recycled concrete was analyzed. The results indicate that the optimal curing system for both DC (waterborne polyurethane is added separately from water) and HC (waterborne polyurethane is mixed with some effective water and then added) is the 14 d standard curing-14 d indoor natural drying curing system. Waterborne polyurethane can fill the pores and micro-cracks inside WPUMRC or interweave with the hydration products of cement to form a spatial network structure, reducing the porosity, and thereby improving the capillary water absorption performance of WPUMRC. Based on the MIP test results, the grey correlation method was used to establish the relationship between capillary water absorption and the pore structure of WPUMRC under the optimal curing system. In addition, the prediction model of capillary water absorption in recycled concrete was established according to the test results, which can be used to predict WPUMRC's capillary water absorption performance.

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