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Fundamentals of Concrete

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PC Water Aggregates (FA & CA) Voids. Heterogeneous and isotropic ... Glass 'alkali attack' Steel. Fibers. Synthetic 1 to 1.5 lb per cu. yd. polypropylene ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fundamentals of Concrete


1
Fundamentals of Concrete
2
There is No such Animal as a Cement _at_!
  • Composition of Concrete
  • PC Water Aggregates (FA CA) Voids
  • Heterogeneous and isotropic
  • Wood is homogeneous and non-isotropic
  • Steel is homogeneous and isotropic
  • 1 bag of PC weighs 94
  • Properties of Fresh Concrete and Hardened Concrete

3
Fresh Properties - ASTM
  • Slump
  • Temperature
  • Density Yield
  • Air Content
  • Time of Setting

4
Hardened Properties - ASTM
  • Strength
  • Air Content
  • Density, Absorption and Voids
  • Volume Change
  • Durability
  • Permeability

5
How does Concrete Get Its Strength
  • PC water hydration reaction gt GLUE Heat
  • Cementitious material literally glues all of the
    inert (non-reactive) aggregates together to
    produce a solid load bearing mass that we call
    PCC
  • Strength is inversely proportional to the
    water-to-cement ratio

6
Strength vs. w/c Ratio for PCC
Strength, psi
w/c ratio
7
Whats Important
  • Good quality materials
  • PC, water, coarse aggregate, and fine aggregate
  • Proper Proportioning of the Materials
  • Proper Mixing
  • Placing and Finishing
  • Proper Curing
  • QC Testing

8
How about the Costs?
9
Ethics and Safety
  • PC The most expensive component of the mix
  • Dont get shorted on this material
  • Life Cycle Costs vs. Material Costs
  • PCC inherently a safe material considering
  • Highly alkaline
  • Eye protection
  • Skin irritations
  • Heavy 150 pcf or about 2 tons pcy

10
Other Types of Concrete
  • Lightweight Concrete
  • Structural and Non-structural (120 50 pcf)
  • High Density Concrete (400 pcf)
  • Mass Concrete
  • Pre-placed Concrete
  • No Slump Concrete
  • Roller-Compacted Concrete
  • Shotcrete (Wet and Dry)

11
PC does NOT come from Portland Oregon
  • History
  • Portland Cement
  • Limestone Sand Clay Iron ore heat(1500 C)
    PC Clinker Grinding PC powder
  • Dry process and wet process ( p. 22 and 23)
  • Hydraulic Cement hardens in air and under water
  • Types I, II, III, IV and V
  • IA and IIA blended with air-entraining agents
  • White Portland Cement

12
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14
Blended Cements
  • Blended Cements
  • Type IP or P Portland Pozzolan Cement
  • Moderate heat and moderate sulfate resistance
  • Class C Fly Ash 15 to 40
  • Class F Fly Ash 15 to 25 (FDOT)
  • Type IS or S - Portland Blast Furnace Slag Cement
  • Low Heat (FDOT)
  • 25 70

15
Other Types of Cement
  • High Early Strength Cements - RR
  • Calcium Sulfoaluminate Rapid Set
  • Calcium Aluminate Cements- Cement Fondu
  • Magnesium Phosphate SET-45
  • Oil-Well Cements
  • Acid Resistant Cements
  • Silicate based
  • Sulfur

16
Mixing Water
  • Potable
  • ie. Water suitable for drinking
  • Chloride lt 0.05
  • Sulfate lt 0.08
  • Organic salts lt 0.05
  • sugar

17
Aggregates
  • Coarse Aggregate
  • Retained on 4 Sieve
  • Igneous, Sedimentary and Metamorphic rock
  • Granite
  • Limestone
  • River gravel

18
CA continued
  • Maximum size from 6-in to 3/8-in
  • Max size governed by ACI code
  • Graded down to 4 sieve according to ASTM C136
  • Common gradations, 467, 57, 67 and 89
  • 1-1/2 in max, 1-in max, ¾-in max, and 3/8-in max
    respectively
  • Aggregate Testing according ASTM Standards
  • TABLE 5.2 (Page 81)

19
Aggregates
  • Fine Aggregate
  • Passing 4 Sieve ¼-in.
  • Natural Siliceous and Crushed Limestone
  • Graded according to ASTM C33
  • See next slide
  • Fineness modulus
  • Indication of the average particle size (2.0 to
    3.0)
  • Fine Aggregate Testing according to ASTM
  • TABLE 5.2 (Page 81)

20
Fine Aggregate Grading Limits
21
Fine Aggregate
FDOT
passing
ASTM
200
4
Sieve Size
22
Fineness Modulus Calculation
23
Recycled Concrete Aggregate
  • Old concrete that has been removed and crushed to
    produce aggregate.
  • Coarse aggregate in new concrete
  • Fine aggregate in new concrete
  • Best combination is CA with natural fine
    aggregate
  • Good strength
  • Drying shrinkage problem
  • Base-coarse replacement for natural limestone

24
Mineral Admixtures
  • Pozzolanic (cement replacement)
  • Class F Fly ash 15 to 25 bwc
  • Class C Fly ash 15 to 40 bwc
  • Blast Furnace Slag (cement replacement)
  • 25 to 70 bwc
  • Silica Fume (cement addition)
  • 6 to 12 bwc

25
Chemical Admixtures ASTM C-494 (Ch. 6)
  • Table 6-1
  • Water Reducing Type A
  • Set Retarding Type B
  • Set Accelerating Type C
  • Water Reducer-Set Retarding Type D
  • Water Reducer-Accelerating Type E
  • High Range Water Reducers Type F
  • HR Water Reducer-Set Retarding -Type G

26
Fibers (see Table 7-1)
  • Natural Egyptian pyramids
  • Straw, bamboo, and wood
  • Glass alkali attack
  • Steel
  • Fibers
  • Synthetic 1 to 1.5 lb per cu. yd.
  • polypropylene
  • nylon

27
Air-Entraining Agents ASTM C260 (Ch. 8)
  • Admix that produces stable bubble system
  • Liquid and solid
  • Low dosage rates relative to other chemical
    admixtures (0.005 to 0.05 bwc).
  • Increase in durability _at_freeze/thaw
  • Reduces compressive strength
  • 3-5 per percent of entrained air

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