Fibers (Apr 2022)

Impact of Thermal Stress on Abrasive Dust from a Carbon Fiber-Reinforced Concrete Composite

  • Arne Koch,
  • Lukas Friederici,
  • Petra Fiala,
  • Armin Springer,
  • Sebastiano Di Bucchianico,
  • Michael Stintz,
  • Marcus Frank,
  • Christopher Paul Rüger,
  • Thorsten Streibel,
  • Ralf Zimmermann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/fib10050039
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. 39

Abstract

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Recently, a novel corrosion-resistant construction material, Carbon Concrete Composite (C3), consisting of coated carbon fibers embedded in a concrete matrix, was introduced. However, thermal exposure during domestic fires may impact the release of organic pollutants and fibers during abrasive processing and/or demolition. Consequently, the objective of this study was to explore the emission characteristics of toxic compounds and harmful fibers during the dry-cutting after exposure to 25–600 °C (3 h, air). These parameters mimic the abrasive machining and dismantling after a domestic fire event. Mass spectrometry and chromatography served as analytical methodologies, and no organic pollutants for exposure temperatures ≥ 400 °C were found. In contrast, significant amounts of pyrolysis products from the organic fiber coating were released at lower temperatures. Studying the morphology of the released fibers by electron microscopy revealed a decrease in fiber diameter for temperatures exceeding 450 °C. At ≥550 °C, harmful fibers, according to the World Health Organization (WHO) definition, occurred (28–41 × 103 WHO fibers/m3 at 550–600 °C). This leads to the conclusion that there is a demand for restraining and protection measures, such as the use of wet cutting processes, suction devices, particle filtering masks and protective clothing, to handle thermally stressed C3.

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