• Title/Summary/Keyword: early age strength

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Experimental and SEM Analyses of Ground Fly Ash in Concrete

  • Brueggen, Beth;Kang, Thomas H.K.;Ramseyer, Chris
    • International Journal of Concrete Structures and Materials
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    • 제4권1호
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    • pp.51-54
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    • 2010
  • Fly ash is used in concrete to improve the fresh and hardened properties of concrete, including workability, initial hydration temperature, ultimate strength and durability. A primary limitation on the use of large quantities of fly ash in blended cement concrete is its slow rate of strength gain. Prior studies investigated the effects of grinding fly ash and fly ash fineness on the performance of concrete containing fly ash. This study aims to discover the sources of those effects, to verify the compressive strength behavior of concrete made with raw and processed Class C fly ash, and to investigate the properties of fly ash particles at the microscopic level. Concrete cylinder test results indicate that grinding fly ash can significantly benefit the early age strength as well as the ultimate strength of concrete with ground fly ash. Therefore, it is demonstrated that grinding fly ash increases its reactivity. Scanning Electron Microscopy was then used to investigate the physical effects of the grinding process on the fly ash particles in order to identify the mechanism by which grinding leads to improved concrete properties.

An Experimental Study on the Properties of Lightweight Concrete Using Expanded Clay (팽창점토를 사용한 경량콘크리트의 특성에 관한 실험적 연구)

  • Kim, Jong-In;Choi, Young-Wha;Ha, Sang-Jin
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Industry Convergence
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    • 제5권3호
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    • pp.225-232
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    • 2002
  • The purpose of this study is to find the mechanical properties of lightweight concrete using expanded clay. Thus, slump, air content, compressive strength, elastic modulus, tensile strength, length change ratio, unitweight change ratio and absorption of lightweight concrete have been investigated. The conclusions of this study are as follows ; 1. The loss of slump and air content of concrete increased as the expanded clay content increased and the size of coarse aggregate decreased. 2. The compressive strength of concrete using 100% expanded clay of 13, 19mm size at 28 days were respectively 282, $252kgf/cm^2$. 3. The elastic modulus and tensile strength of concrete decreased with increase of expanded clay content. 4. The length change ratio of concrete increased with the larger coarse aggregate size, and decreased with the increase of expanded clay content. 5. The unit weight of concrete decreased with the increase of expanded clay content, and the ratio of that was larger at the early age.

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Evaluation of Thermal Expansion Coefficient and Autogenous Shrinkage Properties of High Strength Mass Concrete Using Retarder AgentBusiness (응결지연제를 사용한 고강도 매스 콘크리트의 열팽창계수 및 자기수축 특성 평가)

  • Shin, Kyoung-Su;Koo, Kyung-Mo;Lee, Eui-Bae;Kim, Young-Sun;Kim, Young-Duck;Kim, Gyu-Yong
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 한국건축시공학회 2009년도 춘계 학술논문 발표대회 학계
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    • pp.73-76
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    • 2009
  • Autogenous shrinkage of high-strength mass concrete is affected high temperature history. So to evaluate autogenous shrinkage of high-strength mass concrete accurately, thermal expansion in it should be removed. In this study, compensated autogenous shrinkage was calculated after gathering thermal expansion coefficient at early age experimentally. As a result of the study. Autogenous shrinkage of mass specimen (300 ${\times}$ 300 ${\times}$ 300mm) was remarkably higher than it of standard specimen (100 ${\times}$ 100 ${\times}$ 400mm). So it was found that compensation on thermal expansion should in evaluating autogenous shrinkage of high-strength mass concrete. And this study shows results on opc and similar own contraction, if used retarder.

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TEMPERATURE CONTROL AND COMPRESSIVE STRENGTH ASSESSMENT OF IN-PLACE CONCRETE STRUCTURES USING THE WIRELESS TEMPERATURE MEASURING SYSTEM BASED ON THE UBIQUITOUS SENSOR NETWORK

  • Ho Kyoo JO;Hyung Rae KIM;Tae Koo KIM
    • International conference on construction engineering and project management
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    • The 3th International Conference on Construction Engineering and Project Management
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    • pp.794-799
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    • 2009
  • The temperature control of in-place concrete is the most important factor for an early age of curing concrete. Heat stress of mass concrete caused by the heat of hydration can induce the crack of concrete, and a frost damage from cold weather casting concrete results defect on compressive strength and degradation of durability. Therefore, success and failure of concrete work is dependant on the measurement and control of concrete temperature. In addition, the compressive strength assessment of in-place concrete obtained from the maturity calculated from the history of temperature make a reduction of construction cycle time, possible. For that purpose, wireless temperature measuring system was developed to control temperature and assess strength of concrete. And, it was possible to monitor the temperature of concrete over 1km apart from site office and to take a proper measure; mesh-type network was developed for wireless sensor. Furthermore, curing control system that contains the program capable to calculate the maturity of concrete from the history of temperature and to assess the compressive strength of concrete was established. In this study, organization and practical method of developed curing control system are presented; base on in-place application case.

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A Study on Applicability of Embedded Smart Sensor for Concrete Curing Monitoring (콘크리트 양생 강도 모니터링을 위한 매립형 지능형 센서의 적용성 연구)

  • Park, Seung-Hee;Kim, Dong-Jin;Hong, Seok-Inn;Lee, Chang-Gil
    • Journal of the Korea Concrete Institute
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    • 제23권2호
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    • pp.219-224
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    • 2011
  • In this study, a piezoelectric smart sensor that can be embedded inside of concrete structures is developed to investigate the early stage of concrete curing. A waterproof coating is used to protect the piezoelectric sensor from moistures of concrete mixture. Also, a mortar case is utilized to encapsulate the sensor to protect it from impact loads. To estimate the strength of concrete, a self-sense guided-wave actuated sensing technique is applied. In the guided wave, its velocity is varied according to the mechanical properties of concrete such as modulus of elasticity. Because modulus of elasticity directly affects the strength of concrete, the guidedwave's velocity also affects the concrete strength development. To verify the feasibility of using the proposed approach, the smart sensor was embedded into a 100MPa concrete cylinder and the self-sense guided wave is continuously measured throughout the curing process. The measurements showed that the propagation time (TOF) of the measured guided waves gradually decreased as the curing age increased. Especially, at the early age of the curing process, the variation of the TOF was very significant. Furthermore, the results showed that there is a linear relationship between the TOF of the self-sense guided waves and the strength of concrete existed. It is safe to conclude that the proposed approach can be used very effectively in monitoring of the strength development of high strength concrete structures.

Concrete Maturity Method Using Variable Temperature Curing: Experimental Study (가변 온도 양생 방법을 이용한 콘크리트 성숙도 (Maturity)의 실험적 고찰)

  • Kim, Tae-Wan;Kim, Kwang-Soo;Han, Kyung-Bong;Park, Sun-Kyu;Oh, Seok-Min
    • Journal of the Korea Concrete Institute
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    • 제19권6호
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    • pp.693-700
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    • 2007
  • The maturity method is used to estimate the effects of time and temperature on the strength development of concrete. The purpose of this paper is to show how variable curing temperatures affect strength development for both normal and high-strength concrete using the maturity concept. The experimental results for normal-strength concrete show clearly the cross-over effect of strength development as the time of the peak temperature varied. However, this cross-over effect does not exist after the actual ages are converted to the temperature dependent equivalent age. In other words, the existing maturity method does not include the effect of varying the time to peak temperatures but instead includes the effect of the magnitude of peak temperatures. For high-strength concrete, the results were inconclusive. This fact for normal-strength concrete coincides with the ASTM stated limitation that the existing maturity method doesn't take into account the effect of early age temperature on long-term ultimate strength. The results of this 3-year study are used as a basis for an improved concrete maturity function.

Development of Efficient Curing Sheet for Thermal Insulation Curing of Concrete in Cold Weather

  • Han, Cheon-Goo;Son, Myung-Sik;Choi, Hyun-Kyu
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Building Construction
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    • 제12권3호
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    • pp.291-298
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    • 2012
  • For cold weather concreting, frost damage at early age is generated in the concrete, and problems such as delaying of setting and hardening and lowering of strength manifestation emerge due to the low outside air temperature at the early stage of pouring, making the selection of an effective curing method critically important. Unfortunately, the tent sheet currently used as the curing film for heating insulation at work sites, not only has the problems of inferior permeability and extremely deteriorated airtightness, but a phenomenon of continuous fracturing is also generated along the direction of fabric of the material itself, presenting difficult circumstances for maintaining adequate curing temperature. The aim of this study was to develop an improved bubble sheet type curing film for heating insulation of cold weather concrete by combining mesh-tarpaulin, which has excellent tension properties, with bubble sheet, which offers superior insulation performance. The analysis showed that the improved curing film in which BBS1 is stacked to MT was a suitable replacement for curing films currently in use, as it has better permeability, tension property, and insulation performance than the T type film used at work sites today.

Effect of Cement Particle Size on Properties of Ordinary Portland Cement (보통 포틀랜드 시멘트 물성에 미치는 시멘트 입도의 영향)

  • Byun, Seung-Ho;Kim, Hyeong-Cheol;Kim, Jae-Young;Choi, Hyun-Kuk;Song, Jong-Taek
    • Journal of the Korean Ceramic Society
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    • 제47권5호
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    • pp.394-400
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    • 2010
  • This study examined the effects of particle size on characteristics of cement by controlling the particle size of commercial cement. Through a size adjustment, the cement has increasing more of particles that are less than $10{\mu}m$ in size so the initial reaction time has been shortened as a result of improvement in the early hydration reaction. Additionally, it showed a great characteristics of strength from the early age and the initial hydration heat has been increased as well. In the upper and middle parts cements, the initial hydration reaction rate contribution is high with the $10{\mu}m$ compared to original cement. So the initial hydration reaction rate is improved and as a result, it also showed relatively high hydration heat as well. Additionally, adiabatic temperature also showed an increase rate in the results.

Durability and mechanical performance in activated hwangtoh-based composite for NOx reduction

  • Kim, Hyeok-Jung;Park, Jang-Hyun;Yoon, Yong-Sik;Kwon, Seung-Jun
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • 제11권4호
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    • pp.307-314
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    • 2021
  • Activated hwangtoh (ACT) is a natural resource abundant in South Korea, approximately 15.0% of soil. It is an efficient mineral admixture that has activated pozzolanic properties through high-temperature heating and rapid cooling. The purpose of this study is to improve a curb mixture that can reduce NOx outside and investigate durability performance. To this end, mortar curb specimens were manufactured by replacing OPC with ACT. The ACT substitution ratios of 0.0, 10.0, and 25.0% were considered, and mechanical and durability tests on the curb specimens were conducted at 28 and 91 days of age. Steam curing was carried out for three days for the production of curbs, which was very effective to strength development at early ages. The reduction in strength at early ages could be compensated through this process, and no significant performance degradation was evaluated in the tests on chloride attack, carbonation, and freezing and thawing. The mortar curb with an ACT of 10.0~25.0% replacement ratio exhibited clear NOx reduction through photocatalytic (TiO2) treatment. This is due to the increase in physical absorption through surface absorption and the photocatalyst-containing TiO2 coating. In this study, the reasonable range of the ACT replacement ratio for NOx reduction was quantitatively evaluated through a comprehensive analysis of each test.

Effect of sulfate activators on mechanical property of high replacement low-calcium ultrafine fly ash blended cement paste

  • Liu, Baoju;Tan, Jinxia;Shi, Jinyan;Liang, Hui;Jiang, Junyi;Yang, Yuanxia
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • 제11권3호
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    • pp.183-192
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    • 2021
  • Due to economic and environmental benefits, increasing the substitution ratio of ordinary cement by industry by-products like fly ash (FA) is one of the best approaches to reduce the impact of the concrete industry on the environment. However, as the substitution rate of FA increases, it will have an adverse impact on the performance of cement-based materials, so the actual substitution rate of FA is limited to around 10-30%. Therefore, in order to increase the early-age strength of high replacement (30-70%) low-calcium ultrafine FA blended cement paste, sodium sulfate and calcium sulfate dihydrate were used to improve the reactivity of FA. The results show that sodium sulfate has a significant enhancement effect on the strength of the composite pastes in the early and late ages, while calcium sulfate dihydrate has only a slight effect in the late ages. The addition of sodium sulfate in the cement-FA blended system can enhance the gain rate of non-evaporation water, and can decrease the Ca(OH)2 content. In addition, when the sulfate chemical activators are added, the ettringite content increases, and the surface of the FA is dissolved and hydrated.