Saving the Concrete Jungle: How to Make Concrete Bendable
By Prof Christopher Leung
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Date: 12 Mar 2015
Time: 12:30 pm - 2 pm (Lunch included)
Venue: HKUST Business School Central
15/F, Hong Kong Club Building
3A Charter Road, Central, Hong Kong.
Remarks: Limited seats and first-come-first served. Priority is given to new comers. Registration starts one month before the talk.


Details
Concrete is everywhere in modern construction. Yet its major drawback is in being brittle. Its low bendability and energy absorption can result in catastrophic failure under severe loading conditions. It also has a poor ability to control the opening of cracks and the penetration of water and other chemicals leading to steel corrosion, a major problem in reinforced concrete structures around the world. But a solution is at hand. Through proper material design guided by mechanics theory, such materials can be made bendable and energy-absorbent by incorporating short fibres. Thus loaded, many harmless fine cracks will form instead of a few dangerously big cracks, significantly improving structural durability. The talk will explain the fundamental principles behind the design of these bendable materials, citing applications from around the world. Ongoing R & D at HKUST on these composites will be highlighted.

Speaker Profile
Prof Christopher Leung
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Prof Christopher Leung is Head of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at HKUST. Educated at the University of Hong Kong with a Master of Science from the University of California at Berkeley and a PhD from MIT, he started his academic career as Assistant Professor at MIT in 1992, becoming its Associate Professor before returning to join HKUST in 1997. Prof Leung’s major research and teaching interests are in construction materials. Specifically, he has been working on the development of advanced composites and optical fiber sensors for civil engineering applications. With nearly 200 research papers to his credit, he has received the Best Applied Research Paper Award from the ASCE Journal of Composites in Construction and the Highly Cited Paper commendation from the Engineering Fracture Mechanics Journal. Together with mainland China research collaborators, he won the 2012 China Ministry of Education Award (First Class) in Natural Sciences.
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