Periodic Reporting for period 3 - LORCENIS (Long Lasting Reinforced Concrete for Energy Infrastructure under Severe Operating Conditions)
Período documentado: 2019-04-01 hasta 2020-03-31
The LORCENIS concept with cost-efficient operation has been based on an optimal combination of novel technologies involving internal curing, customised protection, repairing (healing) and self-diagnosis methodologies. The functionality of the developed concrete materials was verified from a proof of concept (TRL 3) to technology demonstration (TRL 6-7), supported by numerical tools to capture the multi-scale evolution of damage and models for service life prediction. 4 scenarios were considered for demonstration:
S1: Concrete infrastructure in deep sea and (sub-)arctic zones: offshore windmills, gravity based structures, bridge piles, harbours.
S2: Concrete and mortar under mechanical fatigue: offshore windmills, sea structures.
S3: Concrete structures exposed to high temperature thermal fatigue: concentrated solar power plants.
S4: Concrete structures subjected to acid attack: sewage plant.
Moreover, LORCENIS considered analysis of cost-effectiveness and commercial potential of project outcomes within their exploitation strategy, as well as including the environmental and sustainability concerns through LCA and LCC analysis. Safety and health considerations were also addressed.
LORCENIS was realized by a well-balanced consortium of multidisciplinary experts from 9 universities and research institutes and 7 industries from 8 countries involving 2 SMEs.
Durability tests in accelerated lab-scale exposure conditions (TRL 4-5) designed for each scenario were carried out in WP3 on stable concrete formulations to give recommendation for the prototype design. The formulations were used as reference as well as modified by implementing 10 different self-responsive materials developed in WP2 (Development of Stable Admixtures with Active internal Curing, Self-sealing and Self-healing Properties) responsible for the preparation and upscaling of the materials, and screening of their compatibility with mortar formulations. Based on the requirements set-up for mix designs according to the scenarios demands in WP3, the evaluated materials properties for all the selected 11 reference mix designs were within the specifications.
LORCENIS made self-responsive materials for incorporation into concrete available as TRL3-4 as well as on stable concrete formulations containing self-responsive materials verified at TRL 4-5. The selection of the most promising technologies for demonstration activities was based on labs-scale performance results (TRL3-5) obtained from specimen exposure to simulated conditions like freeze/thaw cycles, immersion to aggressive media and temperature cycles. The recommended LORCENIS technologies were applied in 12 concrete prototypes designed for the 4 main scenarios and exposed in WP5 for validation (TRL 5) and demonstration under relevant industrial and operational conditions (TRL 6-7). Self-responsive functionality of the developed concrete materials under severe operating conditions were successfully proved with enhanced life-span that could be estimated based on the performance factors.
The multiscale service life predicting modelling approach for reinforced concrete structure in highly corrosive environment in WP4 verified and validated the full modelling chain linking the different scales and created an advanced engineering software tool called SEBASTOS. Currently, the software works with few degrees of freedom, and is reasonably fast to predict end-of-life. A "1 minute-on-a-laptop" ambition is realistic. In parallel, the full LCA and LCC analyses with a sustainability and market analysis including cost impacts were performed in WP6 following a sustainability approach.
The awareness and dissemination plan, data management plan (DMP) and the plan for the Exploitation and Dissemination of Results (PEDR) were periodically updated. At the external website (www.lorcenis-eu.com) the biannual LORCENIS Newsletters are published. The international LORCENIS conference was successfully arranged in September 2019/Gent. The Advisory Board (AB) with invited experts on energy sector infrastructures discussed the LORCENIS strategies towards future market take-up.
The scaling-up protocols of various optimised nano-additives capable of providing self-responsive ability compatible with the concrete matrix are beneficial for the construction industry. The ambition is to withstand extreme operating conditions achieving 100% of crack healing through the incorporation of the ideal dosage of each nanomaterial with improved stability, mechanical properties, quicker self-healing activity and competitive production costs. The overall potential is very high since LORCENIS will offer a route to precisely engineer concrete for specific applications, reducing costs and increasing performance. Developing cement and concrete related nanotechnology have a sustained and important impact on the future of the construction industry enabling entirely new applications for concrete.
Tools for automatic differentiation (AEST) will significantly decrease the workload when investigating the most detrimental phenomena concerning concrete structures: chloride ingress. Predictive modelling and the ability to handle in-service performance is an essential part of the EMMC roadmap and a vision topic of digital European future. All findings in LORCENIS will have a huge impact on the durability of energy and transport infrastructures: costs will be saved already in the design phase by simulating the behaviour of materials with different admixtures in a given environment.
LORCENIS aims to overcome any risks originating from missing knowledge or regulations and uncertainties related to health and environmental issues. A risk assessment tool will serve to reduce potential risks from particulate nanomaterials by safe manufacturing, handling and control of exposure; specific best practice guides will be proposed. Life cycle (cost) analyses (LCA, LCC) will gain a new level of quality subsequently lowering service life expenses achieving a substantial “economical” modelling impact.
The user-friendly project website was essential to trigger dissemination and exploitation LORCENIS results worldwide towards potentially interested parties across industry groups, geographical markets and the academic community and will prepare the market take-up of the developed technology using business-oriented commercialisation plans for each partner involved.