The need for continued rehabilitation of our concrete infrastructure has
lead to the adaptation of modern “state-of-the-art” analytical methods for
the characterization of concrete and other cementitious materials. Some of
these techniques have not, until relatively recently, been commonly
associated with the evaluation of concrete but are very useful both as tools
for quality assurance and in the determination of the extent of existing
damage. The technique of interest here is the coordinated electron-optical
microscopic evaluation of concrete.
Concrete is the most widely used building material in the world. Contrary to
popular belief, concrete is not inert but chemically very complex and
dynamic. While it is true that, pound for pound, concrete and its raw
materials (cement, aggregate and water} are the most inexpensive building
materials available for construction, it is also true that it responds to
its environment in numerous and sometimes very subtle ways. These responses
may sometimes result in a loss of durability and tremendous amounts of time
and money being expended while searching for the cause(s) of the problem and
providing a cost-effect solution A quick survey of any large metropolitan
area and the on-going construction repairs to highways and bridge decks
there will quickly confirm this.