Durability and service life design of concrete constructions have considerable socio-economic and environmental consequences, in which the permeability of concrete to aggressive intruders plays a vital role.
Concrete Permeability and Durability Performance provides deep insight into the permeability of concrete, moving from theory to practice, and includes some twenty real cases such as Tokyo’s Museum of Western Art, Port of Miami Tunnel and Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao sea-link. It stresses the importance of site testing for a realistic durability assessment and details the ‘Torrent Method’ for non-destructive measurement of air-permeability.
It also delivers answers for some vexing questions:
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Should the coefficient of permeability be expressed in m² or m/s?
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How to get a ‘mean’ pore radius of concrete from gas-permeability tests?
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Why should permeability preferably be measured on site?
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How can service life of reinforced concrete structures be predicted by site testing of gas-permeability and cover thickness?
Practitioners will find stimulating examples on how to predict the coming service life of new structures and the remaining life of existing structures, based on site testing of air-permeability and cover thickness. Researchers will value theoretical principles, testing methods, as well as how test results reflect the influence of concrete mix composition and processing.