1. Overview of tailoring cementitious composites with various nanomaterials 2. Nano-tailored high-performance fiber-reinforced cementitious composites 3. Nano-tailored cementitious composites with self-sensing capability 4. Nanomaterials in self-healing cementitious composites 5. Nano-tailored TiO2-based photocatalytic cementitious systems for NOx reduction and air cleaning 6. Nano-modification of the rheological properties of cementitious composites 7. Nano-modification in digital manufacturing of cementitious composites 8. Thermal insulation of buildings through classical materials and nanomaterials 9. Nano-modified green cementitious composites 10. Nano-modified geopolymer and alkali-activated systems 11. Nanoscale characterization of cementitious composites 12. Low CO2 reactive magnesia cements and their applications via nano-modification 13. Future developments and challenges of nano-tailored cementitious composites
Mustafa?Sahmaran?is currently working as a Full Professor in the Department of Civil Engineering of Hacettepe?University, Turkey. His research interests include micromechanical design and durability of high-performance and ultra-ductile cementitious composites, recycling industrial and natural waste products into useful construction materials, concrete durability under mechanical and environmental loadings, new-generation multifunctional cementitious composites with self-healing and self-sensing functionalities and nano-modification in cementitious systems. Prof.?Sahmaran?has authored or co-authored over 200 technical publications in his career, including more than 100 refereed journal papers. He is currently the Director of the Advanced Building Materials Laboratory at?Hacettepe?University. Over the past few years, 13 PhD and 30 master students have completed their degrees under his supervision/co-supervision. He has also received several prestigious young scientist awards from various national and internationals organizations, e.g., the Province of Ontario Fellowship in 2007,?the Eser?Tümen?Research and Young Scientist Award in 2012 and 2014, the Turkish Academy of Sciences Distinguished Young Scientist Award in 2012, the Prof. Dr. Mustafa N.?Parlar?Education and Research Foundation Young Scientist Research Incentive Award in 2013, the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey's Young Scientist Incentive Award in Engineering in 2014, and the Society of Science Heroes' Scientist of the Year Award in 2015. In 2018, Mustafa?Sahmaran?was selected to receive the American Concrete Institute (ACI)?Wason?Medal for Materials Research for his co-authored paper on the proposition of new supplementary pre-conditioning procedure that can accelerate the degradation process of concrete specimens when exposed to sulfate attack, which was published in the July/August 2016 issue of the 'ACI Materials Journal'. Prof.?Sahmaran?is a member of several technical committees of the ACI, the American Society of Civil Engineering, the Turkish Society of Civil Engineering, and the US Transportation Research Board.
Faiz?Shaikh?is an Associate Professor in the School of Civil and Mechanical Engineering of Curtin University, Australia. His research focus is on the development of sustainable binders by incorporating high-volume fractions of industrial by-products as partial replacement of OPC and nano and ultrafine materials, use of recycled aggregates in sustainable concrete, mechanical characterization of ductile?fiber-reinforced cement and geopolymer composites,?behavior?of geopolymer composite in fire and natural?fiber-reinforced composites.?He is a Chartered Professional Engineer (CPEng.) in Australia, a fellow of Engineers Australia (FIEAust), and a member of the Concrete Institute of Australia. He has supervised 6 PhD and 2 MPhil students and is currently supervising 5 PhD students. Prof. Shaikh has authored and co-authored 182 technical publications, including one book by Springer, six book chapters, 128 reviewed journal papers, and 47 reviewed conference papers. He also holds an h-index of 38 and 3,970 total citations according to Google scholar. He has also been awarded an A$2.17M competitive grant by various research organizations and industries, including the Australian Research Council (ARC), the Cooperative Research Centre (CRC), the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS), the Waste Authority of Western Australia, and?the Tyre?Stewardship Australia, etc.
Gürkan Yildirim?is currently working as a full-time Associate Professor of Materials Science and Construction Materials in the Department of Civil Engineering of Hacettepe?University, Turkey and is affiliated with the Advanced Building Materials Laboratory of the same department. Prof. Yildirim's research area of expertise encompasses a wide range of concrete technology, in particular, very ductile fiber-reinforced concretes known as strain-hardening cementitious composites (SHCCs) or engineered cementitious composites (ECCs). His work has mainly focused on the inherent ability of ECCs to recover their own damage (i.e.,?cracks) without any need of outside assistance through the mechanism known as autogenous self-healing. He has also engaged in studies related to detailed?fresh/mechanical/durability property characterization of ECCs, the utilization of nanomaterials in conventional and/or ECC-like composites for performance enhancement and improved self-sensing capability, and ductile composites for repair/maintenance applications. His latest research emphasis is placed on the effective recycling/utilization of construction and demolition (CDW) waste in alkali-activation and development of engineered geopolymer composites (EGC) based on CDW. Prof. Yildirim?is the author/co-author of 2 book chapters and more than 80 journal and conference papers, including 42 journal articles indexed by SCI/SCI-Expanded. He has acted as a reviewer for more than 25 scientific journals and is a Review Editor for the 'Journal of Frontiers in Built Environment - Construction Materials'. He was also involved in several national and international research and governmental projects funded by several authorities (i.e., the Ministry of Environment and Urbanization, TUBITAK, the British Council, and the European Commission). Most recently, he was awarded the prestigious Individual Fellowship of Marie?Sklodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA-IF-2019) funded by the European Commission to perform research at the University of Bradford, UK.