The Influence of Bleeding of Cement Suspensions on Their Rheological Properties

Flowable concretes tend to segregate. The risk of segregation is particularly high when the concrete is vibrated during the compaction process. A well-known segregation phenomenon is the so-called “bleeding”. This is a rise of water to the surface of the freshly poured concrete due to the difference...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tabea von Bronk, Michael Haist, Ludger Lohaus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/13/7/1609
id doaj-d91237ced31b421b92e5ca7af9cf309d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d91237ced31b421b92e5ca7af9cf309d2020-11-25T03:49:28ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442020-04-01131609160910.3390/ma13071609The Influence of Bleeding of Cement Suspensions on Their Rheological PropertiesTabea von Bronk0Michael Haist1Ludger Lohaus2Institute for Building Materials Science, Leibniz Universität Hannover, 30167 Hannover, GermanyInstitute for Building Materials Science, Leibniz Universität Hannover, 30167 Hannover, GermanyInstitute for Building Materials Science, Leibniz Universität Hannover, 30167 Hannover, GermanyFlowable concretes tend to segregate. The risk of segregation is particularly high when the concrete is vibrated during the compaction process. A well-known segregation phenomenon is the so-called “bleeding”. This is a rise of water to the surface of the freshly poured concrete due to the difference in density between the mixing water and the concrete’s denser solid components (aggregates, cement and additives). This type of segregation occurs particularly within the paste. The focus of this paper is, therefore, on the sedimentation behavior at the microscale of concrete and especially on the influence of this process on rheological properties of the cement paste. In addition to common bleeding tests of cement suspensions using standing cylinders, rheometric measurements were performed on the suspensions during the bleeding process. A measuring procedure was developed for the rheometric measurements of the sedimenting cement suspensions. The rheological properties of the investigated cement suspensions were determined at four specific measuring times and at four specific measuring heights (i.e., positions) each. With this method it could be shown that the cement suspensions are not homogeneous over their height and that bleeding has a great influence on the rheological properties of cement suspension.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/13/7/1609bleedingcement suspensionrheology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tabea von Bronk
Michael Haist
Ludger Lohaus
spellingShingle Tabea von Bronk
Michael Haist
Ludger Lohaus
The Influence of Bleeding of Cement Suspensions on Their Rheological Properties
Materials
bleeding
cement suspension
rheology
author_facet Tabea von Bronk
Michael Haist
Ludger Lohaus
author_sort Tabea von Bronk
title The Influence of Bleeding of Cement Suspensions on Their Rheological Properties
title_short The Influence of Bleeding of Cement Suspensions on Their Rheological Properties
title_full The Influence of Bleeding of Cement Suspensions on Their Rheological Properties
title_fullStr The Influence of Bleeding of Cement Suspensions on Their Rheological Properties
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Bleeding of Cement Suspensions on Their Rheological Properties
title_sort influence of bleeding of cement suspensions on their rheological properties
publisher MDPI AG
series Materials
issn 1996-1944
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Flowable concretes tend to segregate. The risk of segregation is particularly high when the concrete is vibrated during the compaction process. A well-known segregation phenomenon is the so-called “bleeding”. This is a rise of water to the surface of the freshly poured concrete due to the difference in density between the mixing water and the concrete’s denser solid components (aggregates, cement and additives). This type of segregation occurs particularly within the paste. The focus of this paper is, therefore, on the sedimentation behavior at the microscale of concrete and especially on the influence of this process on rheological properties of the cement paste. In addition to common bleeding tests of cement suspensions using standing cylinders, rheometric measurements were performed on the suspensions during the bleeding process. A measuring procedure was developed for the rheometric measurements of the sedimenting cement suspensions. The rheological properties of the investigated cement suspensions were determined at four specific measuring times and at four specific measuring heights (i.e., positions) each. With this method it could be shown that the cement suspensions are not homogeneous over their height and that bleeding has a great influence on the rheological properties of cement suspension.
topic bleeding
cement suspension
rheology
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/13/7/1609
work_keys_str_mv AT tabeavonbronk theinfluenceofbleedingofcementsuspensionsontheirrheologicalproperties
AT michaelhaist theinfluenceofbleedingofcementsuspensionsontheirrheologicalproperties
AT ludgerlohaus theinfluenceofbleedingofcementsuspensionsontheirrheologicalproperties
AT tabeavonbronk influenceofbleedingofcementsuspensionsontheirrheologicalproperties
AT michaelhaist influenceofbleedingofcementsuspensionsontheirrheologicalproperties
AT ludgerlohaus influenceofbleedingofcementsuspensionsontheirrheologicalproperties
_version_ 1724495319044980736