The effect of ageing and drying on laser scabbling of concrete

B. Peach, M. Petkovski, J. Blackburn, Dirk Engelberg

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Abstract

Laser scabbling of concrete is a process by which the surface layer of concrete is removed through the use of a high power (low power density) laser beam. In order to understand how the age and treatment of structures may affect the laser scabbling process, the aim of the research presented in this paper was to establish a relationship between laser interaction time, surface temperature and volume removal for cementitious materials of different ages and different degrees of saturation. The investigation focussed on (i) the effect of age on saturated specimens and (ii) the effect of prolonged drying. The results show that drying of specimens had the largest effect on scabbling. The effect of age on saturated specimens was small for PFA + OPC pastes, mortars and concretes, but significant for OPC pastes, where the volume of scabbling dramatically reduced with age.
Original languageEnglish
JournalConstruction and Building Materials
Early online date25 Sept 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Keywords

  • Scabbling
  • Ageing
  • Concrete
  • Cement
  • Spalling
  • Moisture content
  • w/b ratio

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