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>Contribution à l'étude du comportement mécanique, du retrait et des propriétés de transport des bétons autoplaçants avec additions minérales, approche numérique et expérimentale
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Contribution à l'étude du comportement mécanique, du retrait et des propriétés de transport des bétons autoplaçants avec additions minérales, approche numérique et expérimentale
Self-compacting concretes (SCC), developed several years ago are still considered as “•novel concrete" as their use remains modest although they have a strong development potential. This is mainly due to their higher cos, their sensitivity to segregation and cracking due to their high shrinkage and also due to the lack of information about their durability. SCCs are distinguished from ordinary concrete mainly by their high content of paste. The use of supplementary cementitious materials (SCM), grow increasingly for economic and environmental reasons. This thesis falls within this context and aims to contribute to the development of greener SCCs and to the study of their durability.Two industrial blended cements containing high amounts of SCM, slag cement CEM Ill and CEM V cement containing slag and fly ash as well as two mineral additions still little studied in the literature: metakaolin and calcined dredged sediment are used. Various SCC mixtures derived from a reference SCC based on CEM 1 cement were developed. The results of the mechanical, physical and chemical testing on the different formulations show a greater or lesser effect of SCM on the mechanical behavior at early age and some positive effect over the long term. The results of measurements of the autogenous and drying shrinkage from fresh state (plastic) to well hydrated state show that some SCMs increase the drying shrinkage of SCCs (slag and calcined sediment) while ethers significantly reduce its amplitude (metakaolin).The undeniable effect of SCMs on improving some durability indicators (chloride diffusion and gas permeability) and on increasing the sensitivity to carbonation was quantified. The rather complex influence of the different SCMs is studied in the light of physicochemical and microscopie analyzes. Finally, mesoscopic modeling is developed and applied to SCCs for a parametric investigation. The effect of the shape of aggregates and their concentration on the overall behavior in compression and tensile SCC specimen as well as the effect of the mechanical damage on the evolution of permeability are studied.
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