Modelling of hygro-thermal behaviour and damage of concrete at temperature above the critical point of water

From MaRDI portal
Publication:3150114

DOI10.1002/nag.211zbMath0995.74505OpenAlexW2018490212MaRDI QIDQ3150114

No author found.

Publication date: 29 September 2002

Published in: International Journal for Numerical and Analytical Methods in Geomechanics (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/nag.211




Related Items (14)

Multiphase flow in deforming porous media: a reviewThermal coupling of fluid flow and structural response of a tunnel induced by fireModeling of cementitious materials exposed to isothermal calcium leaching, considering process kinetics and advective water flow. I: Theoretical modelModels for liquid relative permeability of cementitious porous media at elevated temperature: comparisons and discussionsA thermo-hydro-mechanical model for multiphase geomaterials in dynamics with application to strain localization simulationPredicting the Pore-Pressure and Temperature of Fire-Loaded Concrete by a Hybrid Neural NetworkModelling of hygro-thermal behaviour of concrete at high temperature with thermo-chemical and mechanical material degradation.Modeling deterioration of cementitious materials exposed to calcium leaching in non-isothermal conditionsCoupled model of hygro-thermal behavior of concrete during fireModeling and simulation of wetted porous thermal barriers operating under high temperature or high heat fluxFinite element analysis of non-isothermal multiphase geomaterials with application to strain localization simulationTowards prediction of the thermal spalling risk through a multi-phase porous media model of concreteModeling cementitious materials as multiphase porous media: Theoretical framework and applicationsFinite element analysis of various methods for protection of concrete structures against spalling during fire



Cites Work


This page was built for publication: Modelling of hygro-thermal behaviour and damage of concrete at temperature above the critical point of water