Paper

Electrical resistivity and mechanical properties of cementitious composite incorporating conductive rubber fibres

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Published 1 July 2019 © 2019 IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation Wenkui Dong et al 2019 Smart Mater. Struct. 28 085013 DOI 10.1088/1361-665X/ab282a

0964-1726/28/8/085013

Abstract

Conductive cementitious composites with excellent conductivity and piezoresistivity can be potentially used for pavement deicing, concrete corrosion evaluations or structural health monitoring. Inspired by the practice of recycling rubber wastes for concrete manufacturing, the conductive rubbers are first added as enhanced fillers to improve the electrical conductivity of cementitious composite in this study. Based on the experimental investigations on electrical resistivity, mechanical properties and microstructure, the results show that cementitious composites containing conductive rubber fibres exhibit relatively low resistivity with nearly one order of magnitude to approximately 1 × 104 Ω cm. On the other hand, cementitious composites with aluminium/silver filled rubber (AR) exhibit better conductivity than the counterparts with carbon black filled rubber (CR). For CR reinforced composites (CRC) and AR reinforced composite (ARC) with more than 40 rubber fibres (0.64 vol%), the higher the rubber fibre content, the better is the conductivity but the slightly lower the compressive strength. The cementitious composites reinforced by 100 conductive rubber fibres (1.6 vol%) not only display excellent conductivity but also provides acceptable mechanical properties, with up to 30.6% increase in ultimate strain but only 17.3% reduction in compressive strength. Furthermore, cementitious composites with rubber fibres demonstrate better damping capacity by enlarging stress–strain hysteresis loops compared to the counterpart without rubber. Such promising conductivity and damping properties provide the cementitious composites with great potentials for being used as cementitious composite sensors and smart composites to self-monitor the structural health or traffic load of various transportation infrastructures, such as bridges, highways and pavements.

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