
Review of autonomous self-healing cementitious material
Author(s) -
Sofian Arif Susanto,
Djwantoro Hardjito,
A Antoni
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iop conference series. earth and environmental science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1755-1307
pISSN - 1755-1315
DOI - 10.1088/1755-1315/907/1/012006
Subject(s) - self healing , cementitious , cracking , standardization , computer science , ultimate tensile strength , compression (physics) , materials science , construction engineering , forensic engineering , composite material , engineering , cement , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , operating system
Concrete is a well-known versatile material, and its application is very common in most structures. Concrete performance is high in compression but low in tensile strength, this leads to the appearance of microcracks when the structure bears the designed loading. Such microcracks when ignored, leaves the structure vulnerable to attacks such as seepage of water, chlorides, and other materials that lead to a reduction in performance, and extreme cases failure of the structure. Since cracking is inevitable in concrete, new materials with self-healing properties are introduced into the mixture to take advantage of the external materials while making the concrete stronger. This type of concrete is widely researched from 1970 until the present day and is still in ‘proof of concept stages, and very few to no applications of autonomous self-healing concrete in real-world structures. This paper is an attempt to further classify the existing methodologies and find the gaps between researchers. The autonomous healing of concrete in present-day research varies in results; this means that the self-healing methodology requires standardization. Furthermore, self-healing in concrete does not mean maintenance is not required, it implies an easier maintenance method is possible due to the benefits gained through a possibly higher early cost in construction.