Research activities that have focused on the development and understanding of self-healing concrete have proposed various technologies intended to enhance self-healing capacity. The self-healing performance cannot be identified sufficiently with either a single test or a specific parameter because there are a number of factors that influence the performance of self-healing. Thus, it has become necessary to provide standardized test methods that make it possible to verify and compare the performance of self-healing materials. In this paper, self-healing mortars based on inorganic admixtures, which are developed for sealing 0.3 mm cracks with a healing index of 90%, are produced and used to validate the water permeability test and to propose protocols for the evaluation of self-healing performance. The healing performances of three self-healing mortars and a plain mortar as a reference are evaluated with a comparative study. The equivalent crack width, which can be estimated from the water flow rate, is suggested as a rational evaluation index. Finally, a self-healing performance chart is proposed to comprehensively show the healing performance of cement-based materials.
Maintenance of structures using self-healing concrete technologies has recently been actively studied. However, unlike the technological development of self-healing concrete, research focused on evaluating the self-healing performance is insufficient. Although water permeability experiments are widely used, the reliability of the test results may be reduced due to the viscosity of water and the possibility of elution of material inside the specimen. In this study, we propose a gas diffusion test for estimating the crack width and eventually for application to evaluation of the self-healing performance. The results verified that the proposed method can be effectively applied to the estimation of crack width.
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