• Title/Summary/Keyword: Compressive test

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Effects of Steel Fiber Properties on Compressive and Flexural Toughness of Steel Fiber-Reinforced Concrete (강섬유의 특성이 강섬유보강 콘크리트의 압축 및 휨 인성에 미치는 영향)

  • Lim, Dong-Gyun;Jang, Seok-Joon;Jeong, Gwon-Young;Youn, Da-Ae;Yun, Hyun-Do
    • Journal of the Korea institute for structural maintenance and inspection
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.43-50
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    • 2019
  • Effects of tensile strength and aspect ratio of steel fiber on compressive and flexural behavior of steel fiber-reinforced concrete (SFRC) with high- and normal-strength were investigated. Also, this study explores compressive behavior of SFRC with different loading rate. For this purpose, four types of steel fiber were used for SFRC with specified compressive strength of 35 and 60 MPa, respectively. Cylindrical specimens with a diameter of 150 mm and height of 300 mm were made for compression test, and prismatic specimens with a $150{\times}150mm$ cross-section and 450 mm span length were made for flexural test. Test results from compression and flexural tests indicated that the toughness of concrete significant increased with steel fibers. Especially, using steel fiber with high tensile strength and aspect ratio can be lead to performance improvement of high-strength SFRC. In this study, equations are suggested to predict compressive toughness ratio of SFRC from flexural toughness ratio.

Evaluation of Bond-Slip Behavior of High Strength Lightweight Concrete with Compressive Strength 120 MPa and Unit Weight 20 kN/m3 (압축강도 120 MPa, 단위중량 20 kN/m3 고강도 경량 콘크리트 부착-슬립 거동 평가)

  • Dong-Gil Gu;Jun-Hwan Oh;Sung-Won Yoo
    • Journal of the Korean Recycled Construction Resources Institute
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.39-47
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    • 2023
  • The demand for lightweight and high-strength materials is increasing. However, studies on the bond of concrete and reinforcing bars for high-strength lightweight concrete with a compressive strength of 120 MPa and a unit weight of 20 kN/m3 to structural members are lacking. Therefore, in this paper, 108 specimens of high-strength lightweight concrete with a compressive strength of 120 MPa and a unit weight of about 20 kN/m3 were fabricated, a direct pull-out test was performed, and the bond characteristics were evaluated by comparing the test results with design code. Compared to the decrease in unit weight, the solid bubble shows relatively little reduction in compressive strength and modulus of elasticity. It was f ound to have larger slip and parameter values than concrete with low compressive strength and unit weight.

STUDY ON THE PROPERTIES OF GYPSUM-BONDED DENTAL INVESTMENTS (치과용 석고계 매몰재의 특성에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Kyoung-Sun;Woo, Yi-Hyung;Choi, Boo-Byung
    • The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.137-163
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    • 1990
  • The properties of a investment material can be described by the consistency at the slurry state, the setting time, the compressive strength and the thermal expansion during the casting. In this study the effect of the production parameters which are included the ratio of quartz and cristobalite, the content of binder, the water powder ratio and the content and concentration of additives on the Properties of the gypsum-bonded investments has been investigated with help of the consistency test, the vicat needle test, the compressive strength test, the thermal expansion test, x-ray diffraction and DTA thermal differential test. The experimental results showed that the constitution of a investment with W/P ratio of 0.34, 30% of gypsum, 0.8% aluminium sulfate, 2% magnesium sulfate, 0.6% sodium phosphate was adapted for the properties of the KDA Spec. No. 13 type I investment. The important experimental results are summarized as follows. 1. The consistency of the investment decreased with increasing amount of aluminium sulfate and decreasing amount of sodium phosphate. An addition of magnesium sulfate up to 2% an increase of the consistency was shown. But 3% magnesium sulfate in investment showed a decrease of the consistency. The consistency did not vary significantly with a variation of the content of gypsum and cristobalite and the W/P ratio. 2. Aluminium sulfate and the magnesium sulfate promoted the hardening and the aluminium phosphate delayed the hardening. The setting time increased with amount of gypsum. The effect of the matrix on the setting time was insignificant. With the W/P ratio of 0.34 the setting time was 14 min. 3. The compressive strength decreased with the amount of aluminium sulfate up to 0.25% and increased with the amount of aluminium sulfate greater than 3%. The compressive strength decreased as decreasing the amount of magnesium sulfate and gypsum and as increasing the W/P ratio. The effect of the refractory on the compressive strength was also not significant. With the W/P ratio of 0.34 the compressive strength was $34Kg/mm^2$. 4. The 1st thermal expansion was found at the temperature near and the steady state or the contraction stage was found at the temperature between $250^{\circ}C$ and $500^{\circ}C$. After this stage the 2nd thermal expansion took place at the temperature near $500^{\circ}C$. The amount of thermal expansion increased with decreasing the content of magnesium sulfate, aluminium sulfate and gypsum and the W/P ratio. And the amount of thermal expansion increased as the content of sodium phosphate and cristobalite. With the W/P ratio of 0.34 the amount of total expansion was 1.2%.

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STUDY ON THE PROPERTIES OF GYPSUM-BONDED DENTAL INVESTMENTS (치과용 석고계 매몰재의 특성에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Kyoung-Sun;Woo, Yi-Hyung;Choi, Boo-Byung
    • The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics
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    • v.29 no.1
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    • pp.139-165
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    • 1991
  • The properties of a investment material can be described by the consistency at the slurry state, the setting time, the compressive strength and the thermal expansion during the casting. In this study the effect of the production parameters which are included the ratio of quartz and cristobalite, the content of binder, the water powder ratio and the content and concentration of additives on the properties of the gypsum-bonded investments has been investigated with help of the consistency test, the vicat needle test, the compressive strength test, the thermal expansion test, x-ray diffraction and DTA thermal differential test. The experimental results showed that the constitution of a investment with W/P ratio of 0.34, 30% of gypsum, 0.8% aluminium sulfate, 2% magnesium sulfate, 0.6% sodium phosphate was adapted for the properties of the KDA Spec. No. 13 type I investment. The important experimental results are summarized as follows. 1. The consistency of the investment decreased with increasing amount of aluminium sulfate and decreasing amount of sodium phosphate. An addition of magnesium sulfate up to 2% an increase of the consistency was shown. But 3% magnesium sulfate in investment showed a decrease of consistency. The consistency did not vary significantly with a variation of the content of gypsum and cristobalite and the W/P ratio. 2. Aluminium sulfata and the magnesium sulfate promoted the hardening and the aluminium phoshpate delayed the hardening. The setting time increased with amount of gypsum. The effect of the matrix on the setting time was insignificant. With the W/P ratio of 0.34 the setting time was 14 min. 3. The compressive strength decreased with the amount of aluminium sulfate up to 0.25% and increased with the amount of aluminium sulfate greater than 3%. The compressive strength decreased as decreasing the amount of magnesium sulfate and gypsum and as increasing the W/P ratio. The effect fo the refractory on the compressive strength was also not significant. With the W/P ratio of 0.34 the compressive strength was $34Kg/mm^2$. 4. The 1st thermal expansion was found at the temperature near $250^{\circ}C$ and the steady state or the contraction stage was found at the temperature between $250^{\circ}C$ and $500^{\circ}C$. After this stage the 2nd thermal expansion took place at the temperature near $500^{\circ}C$. The amount of thermal expansion increased with decreasing the content of magnesium sulfate, aluminium sulfate and gypsum and the W/P ratio. And the amount of thermal expansion increased as the content of sodium phosphate ad cristobalite. With the W/P ratio of 0.34 the amount of total expansion was 1.2%.

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Optimization of mix design of micro-concrete for shaking table test

  • Zhou, Ji;Gao, Xin;Liu, Chaofeng
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • v.13 no.3
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    • pp.215-221
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    • 2022
  • Considering their similar mass densities, an attempt was made to optimize the mix design of micro-concrete that used barite sand as an aggregate by substituting marble powder (5%, 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 70%), clay brick powder (30%, 50%, 70%), and fly ash (30%, 50%, 70%) for the concrete (by mass) to form specimens for shaking table tests. The test results showed that for these three groups of materials, the substitutions had little effect on the density. The barite sand played a decisive role in the density, and the overall density of the specimens reached approximately 2.9 g/cm3. The compressive strength and elastic modulus decreased with an increase in the substitution rates for the three types of materials. Among them, the 28 day compressive strength values of the 40% and 50% marble powder groups were 11.73 MPa and 8.33 MPa, respectively, which were 58.7% and 70.7% lower than the control group, respectively. Their elastic modulus values were 1.33×104 MPa and 1.42×104 MPa, respectively, which were 39.1% and 35% lower than those of the control group, respectively. The 28 day compressive strength values of the 50% and 70% clay brick powder groups were 13.13 MPa and 5.8 MPa, respectively, which were 53.8% and 79.6% lower than the control group, respectively. Their elastic modulus values were 1.54×104 MPa and 1.19×104 MPa, respectively, which were 29.7% and 45.4% lower than those of the control group, respectively. The 28 day compressive strength values of the 50% and 70% fly ash groups were 13.5 MPa and 7.1 MPa, respectively, which were 52.5% and 75% lower than those of the control group, respectively. Their elastic modulus values were 1.36×104 MPa and 0.95×104 MPa, respectively, which were 37.9% and 56.6% lower than those of the control group, respectively. There was a linear relationship between the 28 day compressive strength and elastic modulus, with the correlation coefficient reaching a value higher than 0.88. The test results showed that the model materials met the high density, low compressive strength, and low elastic modulus requirements for shaking table tests, and the test data of the three groups of different alternative materials were compared and analyzed to provide references and assistance for relevant model testers.

Evaluation for Applications of Displacement Criterion by the Critical Strain of Uniaxial Compression in Rock Mass Tunnel (일축압축 한계변형률에 의한 암반터널 변위기준 적용성 평가)

  • Kim, Young-Su;Kim, Dae-Man
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.29 no.6C
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    • pp.321-329
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    • 2009
  • Laboratory compressive test was conducted on 6 different types of rock in order to investigate the characteristic of critical strain under uniaxial and triaxial stress condition. The results of uniaxial compressive test mostly ranged within 1~100MPa, the critical strain was also located between 0.1~1.0%. Therefore the results distributed within the upper and lower boundary proposed by Sakurai (1982). And the failure/critical strain ratio (${\varepsilon}_f/{\varepsilon}_0$) showed between 1.0~1.8 value depending on the uniaxial compressive strength. The results of critical strain by triaxial compressive test showed below 0.8% value for all test, the M value calculated from uniaxial and triaxial compressive test results ranged 1.0~8.0 for most of rock specimens. It is concluded that failure strain (${\varepsilon}_{f3}$) of rock mass, which is in triaxial stress condition is larger than the results of uniaxial stress condition (${\varepsilon}_{f1}$) by 1.0~8.0 times and value showed 1.0~1.8 larger value than critical strain (${\varepsilon}_{01}$). Therefore it is a conservative way for rock tunnel to use critical strain (${\varepsilon}_{01}$) calculated from a uniaxial compressive strength on tunnel displacement monitoring.

Influence of Aggregate on the Rebound Value of P Type Schmidt Hammer (P형 슈미트햄머의 반발도에 미치는 골재종류의 영향)

  • 김태현;김기정;이용성;이백수;윤기원;한천구
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2002.10a
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    • pp.239-242
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    • 2002
  • This study is intended to investigate the relationship between rebound value of P type schmidt hammer and the compressive strength with various aggregates, and a series of experiments about early strength quality control by P type schmidt hammer was performed. According to the results, the compressive strength of concrete using basalt and limestone aggregate is higher by 3% and lower by 4% than that of concrete using granite aggregate respectively. Concrete using basalt and lime stone aggregate show high rebound value in vertical strike. Estimation of the compressive strength does not show differences in horizontal strike, but the compressive strength is estimated high in order of granite, basalt and limestone aggregate in vertical strike. A good correlation between the rebound value of schmidt hammer and the compressive strength is confirmed regardless of aggregate types, so it could be possible to control the quality of concrete by P type schmidt hammer test when basalt and limestone aggregates are used at the same time.

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Study on the Compressive Strength Equation using Ultrasonic Pulse Velocity with Concrete Exposed to High Temperature (고온을 받은 콘크리트 적용을 위한 초음파 속도를 이용한 강도추정식 검토)

  • Hwang, Eui-Chul;Kim, Gyu-Yong;Choe, Gyeong-Cheol;Yoon, Min-Ho;Lee, Bo-Kyeong;Lee, Young-Wook
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 2015.11a
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    • pp.139-140
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    • 2015
  • The purpose of this study was to evaluate existing compressive strength equation with concrete exposed to high temperature by ultrasonic pulse velocity. As the result, original compressive strength equation is proper only for compressive strength of normal concrete. Therefore, an accumulation of experimental database of concrete exposed to high temperature is necessary for proposal of new compressive strength equation.

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Characteristics of compressive strength of hardening used by fly ash and waste lime (다량의 폐석회와 석탄회를 이용한 경화체의 강도적 특성)

  • 고대형;이정재;박응모;문경주;소양섭
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2001.11a
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    • pp.653-658
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    • 2001
  • The purpose of this study is to evaluate the compressive strength properties of hardening using the unrefined fly-ash and waste lime and to offer basic data to someone for recycling waste lime Waste limes are tested that specific gravity and pH value and observed microstructure of particle with SEM. The compressive strengths of Wast lime hardening which is mixed with regular ratio according to each admixture are measured. In the results of test, The pH of wast lime is very high by pH 12.1 and specific gravity is 2.22. Compressive strengths on hardening modified waste lime and fly ash is very effective. The vest compressive strengths is show that CaCl$_2$ existed in waste lime

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Compressive Behavior of Carbon/Epoxy Composites under High Pressure Environment-Strain Rate Effect (고압환경에서 탄소섬유/에폭시 복합재의 압축거동에 대한 연구-변형률 속도 영향)

  • 이지훈;이경엽
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Precision Engineering
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.148-153
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    • 2004
  • It is well-known that the mechanical behavior of fiber-reinforced composites under hydrostatic pressure environment is different from that of atmospheric pressure environment. It is also known that the mechanical behavior of fiber-reinforced composites is affected by a strain rate. In this work, we investigated the effect of strain rate on the compressive elastic modulus, fracture stress, and fracture strain of carbon/epoxy composites under hydrostatic pressure environment. The material used in the compressive test was unidirectional carbon/epoxy composites and the hydrostatic pressures applied was 270㎫. Compressive tests were performed applying three strain rates of 0.05%/sec, 0.25%/sec, and 0.55%/sec. The results showed that the elastic modulus increased with increasing strain rate while the fracture stress was little affected by the strain rate. The results also showed that the fracture strain decreased with increasing strain rate.