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2019 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-228
Author(s):  
Kaiwei Liu ◽  
Aiguo Wang ◽  
Daosheng Sun ◽  
Yan Li ◽  
Jinhui Tang

External sulfate attacks on concrete structures may cause serious damage and it has attracted a wide range of attention from numerous researchers over the past decades. However, many studies have been concentrated on the sample which has been already destroyed. This paper investigated the entire deterioration process of mortars that were immersed in Na2SO4 solution containing 3 gSO4 2-/L and 33.8g SO4 2-/l at 20 o C up to 600 days. The study on time-varying regularity of expansion, cracks, compressive strength and mineral phases was investigated. Back scattered electron image was used to further examine the evolution of microstructures of the mortars during the attack process. The results showed that damage process of mortars can be described as induction stage, surface damage, bulk damage and then completely damage stage. Fine ettringites that were formed in restricted spaces, approximately 2-5 μm, result in surface damage. At the bulk damage stage, cracking was the main characteristic of mortar which leads to obvious expansion. In this stage, some large ettringite crystals (>20μm) were just deposited in the formed cracks. At the later stage, gypsum can be easily formed at interfacial transition zones as the consumption of calcium hydroxide, which mainly contributed to completely strength failure rather than expansion.


1995 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Nagasawa ◽  
Hisayoshi Yurimoto ◽  
Masana Morioka

1993 ◽  
Vol 72 (12) ◽  
pp. 1588-1592 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.-L. Hietala ◽  
L. Tjaderhane ◽  
M. Larmas

After being weaned, the Wistar rats (12) were fed on a sucrose diet for five weeks to induce dental caries. Tetracycline was injected intraperitoneally into 7 of them to label the mineralizing dentin front. Five rats without tetracycline injection were used to verify spontaneous fluorescence. The evidently carious area under one prominent fissure from each mandibular molar hemisected sagittally in the midline was photographed under ultraviolet light so that autofluorescence would be revealed. The jaws were then stained with Schiff's reagent and photographed under normal light and again under ultraviolet light. The areas of all the lesions were quantified planimetrically as they appeared on the photographs. The mineral contents of the areas were verified with the back-scattered electron images. The caries lesions revealed with Schiff's reagent also exhibited a change in the color of the dentin fluorescence regardless of the tetracycline labeling. The areas of these lesions followed the shapes of the lesions stained by Schiff's reagent but they were greater. Staining with Schiff's reagent was repeatable after the specimen was washed with ethanol for a few weeks. The loss of minerals was seen in the areas stained with Schiff's reaction but was also related to the change in dentin fluorescence, which seems to be a more sensitive indicator of the caries progression than Schiff's reagent, especially in the early phase of the carious process.


Author(s):  
X. Meng-Burany ◽  
A.E. Curzon

The present work concerns the back-scattered electron image contrast of a thin film of Cu64Mo36 on a silicon substrate. The contrast is defined by the ratio(1)where If and Ib are the backscattered electron signals from the film and from an adjacent bulk reference specimen. In previous work on thin sputtered films of Cu-Mo, Cu-W and Cu-Al both the film and the bulk reference specimen were perpendicular to the incident electron beam. It was found that the dependence of r on the accelerating voltage of the electron beam could be used to obtain both the thickness and the composition of the films. It is the purpose of the present work to determine whether the simple method previously used to extract the required information can be extended to include tilted specimens. As will be seen the method can be adapted to films tilted by less than 50°.


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