Publication detail

High-temperature degradation confirmed by Impact-echo Method tested on Cementations Composite Materials Containing Rubber Aggregates and Acrylic or Ethylene Vinyl Acetate Polymer Binder

ŠTEFKOVÁ, D. TUPÝ, M. SOTIRIADIS, K. TIMČAKOVÁ, K. CHOBOLA, Z.

Original Title

High-temperature degradation confirmed by Impact-echo Method tested on Cementations Composite Materials Containing Rubber Aggregates and Acrylic or Ethylene Vinyl Acetate Polymer Binder

Type

conference paper

Language

English

Original Abstract

The present paper deals with the applicability of Impact-echo acoustic method to testing of cement - based mortar composites degraded at high-temperatures. The specimens were prepared by using a type CEM I Portland cement and siliceous sand, as well as by substituting 25% of sand with shredded automobile tires and by adding of EVA polymer binder (10% w/w to cement mass).

Keywords

Acoustic Emission (AE), High – temperature degradation, rubber aggregates, Impact-echo, Mortar, Eva polymer, bulk density.

Authors

ŠTEFKOVÁ, D.; TUPÝ, M.; SOTIRIADIS, K.; TIMČAKOVÁ, K.; CHOBOLA, Z.

RIV year

2014

Released

6. 10. 2014

Publisher

Brno University of Technology

Location

Brno

ISBN

978-80-214-5018-9

Book

XIth European Conference on NDT

Edition

1

ISBN

1435-4934

Periodical

The e-Journal of Nondestructive Testing

State

Federal Republic of Germany

Pages from

1

Pages to

5

Pages count

5

BibTex

@inproceedings{BUT112834,
  author="Daniela {Kysilková} and Michael {Tupý} and Konstantinos {Sotiriadis} and Kristýna {Timčaková} and Zdeněk {Chobola}",
  title="High-temperature degradation confirmed by Impact-echo Method tested on Cementations Composite Materials Containing Rubber Aggregates and Acrylic or Ethylene Vinyl Acetate Polymer Binder",
  booktitle="XIth European Conference on NDT",
  year="2014",
  series="1",
  journal="The e-Journal of Nondestructive Testing",
  pages="1--5",
  publisher="Brno University of Technology",
  address="Brno",
  isbn="978-80-214-5018-9",
  issn="1435-4934"
}