Navigation
Content
Footer
en
fr
NEWS AND EVENTS
DIRECTORY
PUBLICATIONS
EC-NANTES.FR
menu
close
Our research
Our research
Excellence in research
Rankings
Awards & Distinctions
HR Excellence in Research Award
Meet our researchers
Reinvent engineering
Industry of the future
Energy transition
Engineering for health
Research areas
Networks and clusters
Ethics and professional conduct
Open Science
Research environment
Institutes & facilities
Institutes & facilities
6 research institutes
Architectural and Urban Ambiances Laboratory (AAU)
Center for Research in Transplantation and Translational Immunology (CR2TI)
Jean Leray Mathematical Institute (LMJL)
Laboratory of Digital Sciences of Nantes (LS2N)
Research Institute in Civil and Mechanical Engineering (GeM)
Research Laboratory in Hydrodynamics, Energetics & Atmospheric Environment (LHEEA)
Research facilities
Additive Manufacturing and Biofabrication
Automatic and Systems Control
Autonomous Vehicles and Drones
Composite Materials and Processes
Dynamic Testing Resources and Expertise (PREED Platform)
Engine and vehicle test benches
Geomechanics
Micrometeorology and Wind Engineering
Ocean test facilities
Robotics and Interaction
Sem-Rev offshore test site
Supercomputer and high performance computing
Sustainability and Green Building
Projects and partnerships
Projects and partnerships
Spotlight
Generating clean energy
Decarbonisation of transport
Hydrogen production, transport and storage
Industrial research chairs and joint laboratories
Industrial partnerships
Platform development projects
European projects
Academic research projects
Talent Laureates
Research networks and clusters
Knowledge transfer and dissemination
Knowledge transfer and dissemination
Development and Project Engineering Team
Putting public research to good use
Patents & software
Centrale Innovation
Incubator
Spin-offs
D-ICE
Farwind
HydrOcean
PhD
PhD
Choose a PhD
Follow a PhD at Centrale Nantes
Enrol for a PhD
PhD opportunities
PhD Defenses
Student and graduate testimony
Your contacts
Prepare for a PhD
Doctorate specialisation
R&D professional option
Master's programme
Integrated Master-PhD Track
After the PhD
Our researchers
Our researchers
Join us
Meet our researchers
Visiting and adjunct professors
HRS4R
Ethics and professional conduct
Support services for researchers
Spaces
Spaces
NEWS AND EVENTS
DIRECTORY
PUBLICATIONS
Open Science
EC-NANTES.FR
EN
Research
,
A seminar with Philippe Turcry, La Rochelle University: How to understand carbonation in concrete
Philippe Turcry, faculty member at La Rochelle University, is visiting Centrale Nantes at the invitation of the Research Institute in Civil and Mechanical Engineering (specifically the 'Green engineering approaches' & the 'Processes and durability of materials and structures' Research Groups.) He will give a seminar on 14 September at Centrale Nantes.
On September 14, 2023
from 14:00 To 16:00
Philippe Turcry is a member of faculty at La Rochelle University in the
LaSIE (Laboratoire des Sciences de l’Ingénieur pour l’Environnement)
. He will be giving a seminar (in French) entitled: "How to understand concrete carbonation".
Synopsis:
Carbonation of concrete is a reactive transfer of CO2 within the porous matrix of the material. After dissolving in the interstitial water, the CO2 reacts with the calcium ions provided by the cement hydrates to produce calcium carbonate, a very stable mineral phase. Although this phenomenon is well known, for many years it was studied, as shown by the literature review published in 1958 by Verbeck (1), it remains a topical research subject. Three factors may explain this consistency. Firstly, carbonation is a slow phenomenon, sometimes difficult to explore in the laboratory. Developments in measurement techniques are always providing new answers/questions. Secondly, the knowledge base was established for Portland cements with a high clinker content. After the emergence of new binders with reduced environmental impact over the last decade, it is necessary to update the data and even rethink the investigation methods. Lastly, carbonation can lead to corrosion of steel reinforcement, so it has mainly been considered in the context of the durability of reinforced concrete. However, “carbonation” literally means the mineralisation of CO2. A concrete element undergoing carbonation can be seen as a carbon sink. Against this backdrop, LaSIE (La Rochelle University), develop Over the last twenty years various approaches to understanding this reactive transfer, from accelerated testing to modelling and methods for studying the driving forces behind the phenomenon (gas diffusion, chemical reactivity). The objective of this seminar is to present and to analyze these different approaches, illustrated by a number of applications (carbonation of ‘ecoconcrete’, CO2 capture by recycled concrete aggregates…).
(1) G Verbeck. Carbonation of Hydrated Portland Cement, pages 17–36. ASTM International, West Conshohocken, PA, 01 1958.
When and where
Thursday 14 September at 2.15 pm
Lecture theatre E, Centrale Nantes
1 rue de la Nöe, 44300 Nantes
Learn more
Published on September 13, 2023
Updated on February 27, 2024
Share :
Facebook
X
Linkedin
More news
The SIS Engineering and Systems Sciences doctoral school is one of the partners in the 5th Infrastar training week
Two GeM PhD students at Centrale Nantes awarded research prizes at RUGC (Civil Engineering University Conference) 2024
ExplOr 2023 project: In-situ measurement of wind-wave-aerosol interactions at Belle-Île-en-Mer
https://research.ec-nantes.fr/en/news/lecture-with-philippe-turcry-university-of-la-rochelle-how-to-understand-carbonation-in-concrete