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This volume gathers the latest advances, innovations, and
applications in the field of cementitious composites. It covers
advanced fiber-reinforced concrete materials such as
strain-hardening cement-based composites (SHCC), textile-reinforced
concrete (TRC) and high-performance fiber-reinforced cement-based
composites (HPFRCC). All these new materials exhibit pseudo-ductile
behavior resulting from the formation of multiple, fine cracks when
subject to tensile loading. The use of such types of
fiber-reinforced concrete could revolutionize the planning,
development, dimensioning, structural and architectural design,
construction of new and strengthening and repair of existing
buildings and structures in many areas of application. The contents
reflect the outcomes of the activities of SHCC5 (International
RILEM Workshop on Strain Hardening Cementitious Composites) in
2022.
An exciton is an electronic excitation wave consisting of an
electron-hole pair which propagates in a nonmetallic solid. Since
the pioneering research of Fren kel, Wannier and the Pohl group in
the 1930s, a large number of experimental and theoretical studies
have been made. Due to these investigations the exciton is now a
well-established concept and the electronic structure has been
clarified in great detail. The next subjects for investigation are,
naturally, dynamical processes of excitons such as excitation,
relaxation, annihilation and molecule formation and, in fact, many
interesting phenomena have been disclosed by recent works. These
excitonic processes have been recognized to be quite important in
solid-state physics because they involve a number of basic
interactions between excitons and other elementary excitations. It
is the aim of this quasi monograph to describe these excitonic
processes from both theoretical and experimental points of view. we
take a few To discuss and illustrate the excitonic processes in
solids, important and well-investigated insulating crystals as
playgrounds for excitons on which they play in a manner
characteristic of each material. The selection of the materials is
made in such a way that they possess some unique properties of
excitonic processes and are adequate to cover important
interactions in which excitons are involved. In each material,
excitonic processes are described in detail from the experimental
side in order to show the whole story of excitons in a particular
material."
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