Applied Sciences (May 2024)

Electrical Heating of Carbon Textile Reinforced Concrete—Possible Effects on Tensile Load-Bearing Behavior

  • Annette Dahlhoff,
  • Michael Raupach

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app14114430
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 11
p. 4430

Abstract

Read online

Carbon-textile-reinforced concrete (CTRC) is currently used as a high-performance composite material in the construction industry, comprising concrete and a non-metallic reinforcement. In addition to remarkable material properties such as tensile-load-bearing behavior, durability and density, this innovative material features high electrical conductivity, offering the potential for electrical heat generation within building components. This paper contributes to the field by exploring the unique combination of properties exhibited by carbon-textile reinforcements (CTR) electrically heated up to 80 °C. The impact of the electrical heating of CTR was evaluated by conducting stationary tests on load-bearing behavior. The tests were conducted on two different CTRs: one impregnated with polystyrene, and the other with epoxy resin additionally surface-modified with quartz sand. In order to quantify the influence of individual material parameters, tensile tests were conducted on the components comprising CTR and mortar, as well as the composite CTRC. The analysis focused on electrically heated carbon-textile reinforcements, comparing them through experiments conducted at varying ambient temperatures. This study presents pioneering findings on heated CTRC, determining that electrical heating decreases tensile strength with increasing temperature for the investigated reinforcement materials. The softening of the impregnation materials proved to be a decisive factor. This interdisciplinary approach bridges materials science with thermal management in construction, offering insights into the practical applications of CTR in innovative building designs.

Keywords