X-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments

Frost salt scaling of concrete is related to cyclic freezing and melting of a few millimeter thick deicer solution on the surface of the concrete. It is almost absent when pure water is freezing and reaches a maximum at a so-called pessimum concentration that for NaCl is around 3%. Different mechani...

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Published in:Cold Regions Science and Technology
Main Authors: Maus, Sönke (author), Bahafid, Sara (author), Hendriks, M.A.N. (author), Jacobsen, Stefan (author), Geiker, Mette Rica (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:14f38703-9d0a-4327-a32b-8b14748b0547
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2023.103780
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spelling fttudelft:oai:tudelft.nl:uuid:14f38703-9d0a-4327-a32b-8b14748b0547 2024-04-28T08:37:53+00:00 X-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments Maus, Sönke (author) Bahafid, Sara (author) Hendriks, M.A.N. (author) Jacobsen, Stefan (author) Geiker, Mette Rica (author) 2023 http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:14f38703-9d0a-4327-a32b-8b14748b0547 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2023.103780 en eng http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85146828412&partnerID=8YFLogxK Cold Regions Science and Technology--0165-232X--e1d473b0-8c12-48ad-a7d1-08d373cf7f3c http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:14f38703-9d0a-4327-a32b-8b14748b0547 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2023.103780 © 2023 Sönke Maus, Sara Bahafid, M.A.N. Hendriks, Stefan Jacobsen, Mette Rica Geiker Frost salt scaling Microstructure Percolation Pore space Saline ice Sea ice properties X-ray microtomography journal article 2023 fttudelft https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2023.103780 2024-04-10T00:12:34Z Frost salt scaling of concrete is related to cyclic freezing and melting of a few millimeter thick deicer solution on the surface of the concrete. It is almost absent when pure water is freezing and reaches a maximum at a so-called pessimum concentration that for NaCl is around 3%. Different mechanisms have been suggested to explain this pessimum and frost salt scaling in general, ranging from the transport of moisture and growth of ice within the pore space of concrete (“cryogenic suction”) to crack formation in the saline ice layer followed by spalling off the surface (“glue-spall”). Though in these theories the saline ice layer, that forms in concrete frost salt scaling experiments, plays a major role, so far little is known about its properties. We present a characterisation and an analysis of the microstructure of this saline ice layer by means of 3D X-ray microtomography. We found that the morphology of the saline ice is very similar to young, columnar sea ice, with lamellae of ice and brine oriented in the direction of freezing. On the basis of the microscopic 3D image data, we formulated percolation-based models of macroscopic properties (e.g., strength, thermal expansion coefficient, porosity metrics) relevant for different proposed frost salt scaling mechanisms. Model results and observations suggest that the ice growth velocity, direction and confinement, have a major impact on the pore structure of saline ice, thereby governing both mechanical and transport properties. These properties in turn are expected to affect proposed frost salt scaling mechanisms of concrete. The microstructure length scales in the ice-brine composite (lamellar spacing, pore width) are comparable to those for concrete (air void spacing and size), suggesting complex poro-mechanical interaction at the interface of concrete and saline ice. The results highlight the importance of studying saline ice properties to improve predictions of frost salt scaling processes. Concrete Structures Article in Journal/Newspaper Sea ice Delft University of Technology: Institutional Repository Cold Regions Science and Technology 208 103780
institution Open Polar
collection Delft University of Technology: Institutional Repository
op_collection_id fttudelft
language English
topic Frost salt scaling
Microstructure
Percolation
Pore space
Saline ice
Sea ice properties
X-ray microtomography
spellingShingle Frost salt scaling
Microstructure
Percolation
Pore space
Saline ice
Sea ice properties
X-ray microtomography
Maus, Sönke (author)
Bahafid, Sara (author)
Hendriks, M.A.N. (author)
Jacobsen, Stefan (author)
Geiker, Mette Rica (author)
X-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments
topic_facet Frost salt scaling
Microstructure
Percolation
Pore space
Saline ice
Sea ice properties
X-ray microtomography
description Frost salt scaling of concrete is related to cyclic freezing and melting of a few millimeter thick deicer solution on the surface of the concrete. It is almost absent when pure water is freezing and reaches a maximum at a so-called pessimum concentration that for NaCl is around 3%. Different mechanisms have been suggested to explain this pessimum and frost salt scaling in general, ranging from the transport of moisture and growth of ice within the pore space of concrete (“cryogenic suction”) to crack formation in the saline ice layer followed by spalling off the surface (“glue-spall”). Though in these theories the saline ice layer, that forms in concrete frost salt scaling experiments, plays a major role, so far little is known about its properties. We present a characterisation and an analysis of the microstructure of this saline ice layer by means of 3D X-ray microtomography. We found that the morphology of the saline ice is very similar to young, columnar sea ice, with lamellae of ice and brine oriented in the direction of freezing. On the basis of the microscopic 3D image data, we formulated percolation-based models of macroscopic properties (e.g., strength, thermal expansion coefficient, porosity metrics) relevant for different proposed frost salt scaling mechanisms. Model results and observations suggest that the ice growth velocity, direction and confinement, have a major impact on the pore structure of saline ice, thereby governing both mechanical and transport properties. These properties in turn are expected to affect proposed frost salt scaling mechanisms of concrete. The microstructure length scales in the ice-brine composite (lamellar spacing, pore width) are comparable to those for concrete (air void spacing and size), suggesting complex poro-mechanical interaction at the interface of concrete and saline ice. The results highlight the importance of studying saline ice properties to improve predictions of frost salt scaling processes. Concrete Structures
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Maus, Sönke (author)
Bahafid, Sara (author)
Hendriks, M.A.N. (author)
Jacobsen, Stefan (author)
Geiker, Mette Rica (author)
author_facet Maus, Sönke (author)
Bahafid, Sara (author)
Hendriks, M.A.N. (author)
Jacobsen, Stefan (author)
Geiker, Mette Rica (author)
author_sort Maus, Sönke (author)
title X-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments
title_short X-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments
title_full X-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments
title_fullStr X-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments
title_full_unstemmed X-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments
title_sort x-ray micro-tomographic imaging and modelling of saline ice properties in concrete frost salt scaling experiments
publishDate 2023
url http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:14f38703-9d0a-4327-a32b-8b14748b0547
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2023.103780
genre Sea ice
genre_facet Sea ice
op_relation http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85146828412&partnerID=8YFLogxK
Cold Regions Science and Technology--0165-232X--e1d473b0-8c12-48ad-a7d1-08d373cf7f3c
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:14f38703-9d0a-4327-a32b-8b14748b0547
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2023.103780
op_rights © 2023 Sönke Maus, Sara Bahafid, M.A.N. Hendriks, Stefan Jacobsen, Mette Rica Geiker
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2023.103780
container_title Cold Regions Science and Technology
container_volume 208
container_start_page 103780
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