“…It is now understood that once cement concrete pavement has been poured and completed, environmental factors can cause temperature and humidity gradients inside the concrete, resulting in slab surface shrinking, expansion, and warping, which cause large tensile stresses. Ultimately, these stresses can trigger cracking and even spalling [1]. Especially under the coupling effect of high temperature, high humidity, heavy rain, and strong wind, media such as water and erosion ions in the environment accelerate to penetrate into the interior of concrete along microcracks, causing further crack growth, increasing the probability of diseases such as concrete pavement peeling, affecting service life performance, and further reducing service life.…”