• Title/Summary/Keyword: Underwater curing

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A Fundamental Study on the Antiwashout Underwater Concrete for the Underwater Work of Ocean (수중불분리성 콘크리트의 해양공사 적용에 관한 기초적 연구)

  • 김명식;윤재범;박세인
    • Journal of the Korea Concrete Institute
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    • v.12 no.5
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    • pp.25-34
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    • 2000
  • When concrete is placed underwater, it is diluted with separating cementitious material and as a result the quality of concrete becomes poor. To solve this problem, antiwashout underwater concrete is increasingly used for the construction and repair of the concrete structure underwater. The objective of this study is to investigate the characteristics of antiwashout underwater concrete as to the mix proportion, casting and curing water through experimental researches. The unit weight of water and cement, water-cement ratio, fine aggregate ratio, unit weight of antiwashout underwater agent and superplasticizer, and casting and curing water were chosen to measure the suspended solids, pH, air contents, slump flow, unit weight of hardened concrete, and compressive strength. From this study, the incremental modulus at mix proportion design and unit weight of antiwashout underwater agent were increased more than fresh water, and it is a optimum mix proportion that the unit weight of water(and cement) is 230kg/$\textrm{m}^3$(460kg/$\textrm{m}^3$), waterOcement ratio is 50%, fine aggregate ratio is 40%, unit weight of antiwashout underwater agent is 1.2% of water contents per unit weight of concrete, and unit weight of supeplasticizer is 2.5% of cement contents per unit weight of concrete when the antiwashout underwater concrete is used for the underwater work of ocean.

An Experimental Study on the Characteristics of Compressive Strength of Antiwashout Underwater Concrete with Curing Water (양생수에 따른 수중불분리콘크리트의 압축강도특성에 관한 실험적 연구)

  • 윤재범;고창섭;김명식;장희석
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1999.10a
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    • pp.135-138
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    • 1999
  • The objective of this study is to investigate the compressive strength property of antiwashout underwater concrete with curing water through experimental researches. Type of casting and curing water(fresh water, sea water) are used as main experimental parameter, additionally a few variables affecting compressive strength property are used ; water-cement ratio (45%, 48%, 50%, 52%, 55%), and unit weight of admixtures (antiwashout underwater agent ; 0.6%, 0.8%, 1.0%, 1.2%, 1.4% of unit weight of water, superplasticizer ; 0.5%, 1.0%, 1.5%, 2.0%, 2.5% of unit weight of cement)) Compressive strength level of antiwashout underwater concrete which was cast and cured in fresh water is higher than other one. Consequently, incremental modulus has to increase when the antiwashout underwater concrete is made use of underwater work from ocean.

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Engineering Characteristics of Soil-Lime or Cement Mixtures on the Curing Conditions (양생조건에 따른 생석회 혼합토의 공학적 특성)

  • 민덕기;황광모;이완진;최영철
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 2002.03a
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    • pp.305-312
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    • 2002
  • To estimate the effects of lime and cement on the surplus soil, the engineering properties of the marine deposited clay and the fresh water clay were analyzed. The specimen were prepared under several curing conditions, namely, underwater curing, wet condition curing and underwater curing after heating. Unconfined compression strength were estimated after 7, 14, 28 and 60 days, respectively. The strength were steeply increased with time until first 14 days. Specially the increase of the strength of the heated soil were large.

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Behaviors of Lightweight Foamed Soils Considering Underwater Curing and Water Pressure Conditions (수중양생 및 수압조건을 고려한 경량기포혼합토의 거동)

  • Yoon Gil-Lim;You Seung-Kyong
    • Journal of the Korean Geotechnical Society
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.21-29
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    • 2005
  • Lightweight Foamed Soil (LWFS) could be the substitute of normal soils used in backfill to earth structures and embankment materials far soft ground improvement in port and harbor project because of its effectiveness in settlement reduction and earth pressure decrease due to its lightness. A series of triaxial and unconfined compression tests were performed to investigate behaviors of LWFS composed of dredged soils, cement and air foam, and cured at underwater conditions. The density of LWFS will increase if LWFS is cured at underwater conditions because high water pressure makes air foam disappear or demolish during the curing compared with LWFS cured at normal air conditions. This paper is to find the mechanical behaviors of LWFS cured at seawater depth of 5.0 m and 10.0 m, respectively, which simulates underwater curing conditions by underwater pressure simulator chamber developed during this study. In addition, new normalized factor formula, which takes account of mixing design conditions determining compressive strength of LWFS, was proposed to consider mixing design factor fur LWFS.

Influence of different curing methods on the compressive strength of cemented sand (양생방법이 고결모래의 압축강도에 미치는 영향)

  • Park, Sung-Sik;Kim, Ki-Young;Choi, Hyun-Seok;Kim, Chang-Woo
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 2009.09a
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    • pp.463-471
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    • 2009
  • Cemented soils or concrete are usually cured under moisture conditions and their strength increases with curing time. An insufficient supply of water to cemented soils can contribute to hydration process during curing, which results in the variation of bonding strength of cemented soils. In this study, by the consideration of in situ water supply conditions, cemented sand with cement ratio less than 20% was prepared by air dry, wrapped, and underwater conditions. A series of unconfined compression tests were carried out to evaluate the effect of curing conditions on the strength of cemented soils. The strength of air dry curing specimen was higher than those of wrapped cured specimen when cement ratio was less than 10%, whereas it was lower when cement ratio was greater than 10%. Regardless of cement ratio, air dry cured specimens were stronger than underwater cured specimens. A strength increase ratio with cement ratio was calculated based on the strength of 4% cemented specimen. The strength increase ratio of air dry cured specimen was lowest and that of wrapped and underwater cured ones increased by square. Strength of air dry cured specimen dropped to maximum 30% after wetting when cement ratio was low. However, regardless of cement ratio, strength of wrapped specimens dropped to an average 10% after wetting.

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Study on the Properties of Antiwashout Underwater Concrete as to Fine aggreate Kinds (잔골재의 종류에 따른 수중불분리성 콘크리트의 특성에 관한 연구)

  • 박세인;신현필;이환우;김종수;김명식
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2001.05a
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    • pp.941-946
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    • 2001
  • In this study, three kinds of fine aggregate (river sand, sea sand, crushed sand) were used and four different s/a (38%, 40%, 42%, 45%) were applied separately to this experimental for get the conclusion written below. Regardless of kinds of fine aggregate and casting-curing condition, maximum unit weight is seen at 40% of s/a and also to be seen in case of crushed sand. It's for that specific gravity of crushed sand is bigger comparatively than river sand and sea snad's one. Compressive strength is measured river sand, crushed sand, sea sand by order of size ; Regardless of variation of s/3, casting-curing condition and age. Compressive strength recorded maximum when s/a is 42% whatever sort of fine aggregate are. As the result, according to references, the optimum s/a of underwater antiwashout concrete is 40% but in this study, from compressive strength of view, the optimum s/a of underwater antiwashout concrete is 42%.

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Mechanical and Physical of Antiwashout Underwater Concrete under Different Curing Temperature (양생온도에 따른 수중불분리성 콘크리트의 물리.역학적 특성)

  • 이병덕;원종필;안태송
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1997.04a
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    • pp.301-307
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    • 1997
  • This paper is evaluated for properties of aggregate and antiwashout admixture not only to minimize segregation and water contamination of underwater concrete but also to meet concrete quality required. Two antiwashout admixtures used in this study were available domestically and slump flow, pH, setting time, and filing property of fresh concrete and the compressive strength, flexural strength under water and in the air under 2 different curing conditions ($10^{\cire}C$ and $20^{\cire}C$ ) were measured. Compressive strength ratio of specimens cured in and water temperature $10^{\cire}C$ /$20^{\cire}C$ added HPEC and HPMC was 64% and 89%, respectively. Relative compressive strength of 2 kinds observed higher concrete added HPEC, 3% at $10^{\cire}C$ curing temperature, 34% at $20^{\cire}C$ . The flexural strength of specimens made under water was 1/4~1/6 of compressive strength similar to the existing data in the literature.

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Effect of Marine Environment and Underwater Construction on Mechanical Properties of High Strength Grout (해상환경 및 수중타설이 고강도 그라우트의 역학적 성능에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Beom-Hwi;Son, Da-Som;Yi, Chong-Ku
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 2023.11a
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    • pp.89-90
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    • 2023
  • In this study, grout was poured into seawater to confirm the effect of similar marine environment and underwater erosion on the mechanical performance of domestically produced high-performance grout and compared with the existing strength. As a result of the compressive strength measurement, the specimen that simultaneously performed underwater drilling and seawater curing showed slow initial strength expression in both H1 and H2, and from the 7th day, it was confirmed to be within 2% of the existing intensity. It is believed that both grout were caused by disturbance with water during underwater drilling, and the same strength was subsequently shown as the existing strength.

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Effect of Different Curing Methods on the Unconfined Compressive Strength of Cemented Sand (양생방법에 따른 고결모래의 일축압축강도 특성)

  • Park, Sung-Sik;Kim, Ki-Young;Choi, Hyun-Seok;Kim, Chang-Woo
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.29 no.5C
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    • pp.207-215
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    • 2009
  • Cemented soils or concrete are usually cured under moisture conditions and their strength increases with curing time. An insufficient supply of water to cemented soils can contribute to hydration process during curing, which results in the variation of bonding strength of cemented soils. In this study, by the consideration of in situ water supply conditions, cemented sand with cement ratio less than 20% is prepared by air dry, wrapped, moisture, and underwater conditions. A series of unconfined compression tests are carried out to evaluate the effect of curing conditions on the strength of cemented soils. The strength of air dry curing specimen is higher than those of moisture and wrapped cured specimens when cement ratio is less than 10%, whereas it is lower when cement ratio is greater than 10%. Regardless of cement ratio, air dry cured specimens are stronger than underwater cured specimens. A strength increase ratio with cement ratio is calculated based on the strength of 4% cemented specimen. The strength increase ratio of air dry cured specimen is lowest and that of wrapped, moisture, and underwater cured ones increased by square. Strength of air dry cured specimen drops to maximum 30% after wetting when cement ratio is low. However, regardless of cement ratio, strength of moisture and wrapped specimens drops to an average 10% after wetting. The results of this study can predict the strength variation of cemented sand depending on water supply conditions and wetting in the field, which can guarantee the safety of geotechnical structures such as dam.

Evaluation of Underwater-Curing Coating Materials

  • Nah, Hwan-Seon;Kim, Kang-Seok;Kim, Kang-Sik;Lee, Chul-Woo;Baker, Randy
    • Corrosion Science and Technology
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.68-73
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    • 2009
  • An evaluation of underwater - repair coating materials was based on the premise that defective areas of the existent epoxy coating such as blistering and cracking will be repaired on spot under submerged condition. Tests include the clarification as to whether they are compatible between as-built coating and new repair coating on each concrete specimen. Candidate coating materials for repair were tested in a laboratory to scrutinize their suitability to perform the needed function satisfactorily. The qualification tests performed are as a minimum as follows: Integrated radiation tolerance test, chemical resistance test (submerged condition in deionized water), hardness test and adhesion test of the repair materials. The proper repair coating materials were selected and approved from this test results.