Chapter 4.1 Mortar

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ADDIS ABABA UNIVERSITY

ADDIS ABABA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY


DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL ENGINEERING

CONSTRUCTION MATERIALS (CENG-2102)

CHAPTER 4: MORTAR, CONCRETE MAKING


MATERIALS AND PLAIN CONCRETE
MORTAR
April 2012
(NASIR B.)
MORTAR
CONTENTS
 DEFINITION AND USE
 MORTAR MIXES

 P ROPERTIES OF MORTAR

 MATERIALS FOR MORTAR

 BATCHING AND MIXING


 Mortar is the name given to a mixture of sand or similar inert
particles with cementing materials and water and has the capacity of
hardening into a rock like mass.
 In general the maximum size of the inert particles in mortar is less
than 5mm, and the cementing material is Portland cement and/or
lime.
 In building construction, the uses of mortar are:
I. Jointing medium in masonry construction
 The mortar used to transfer from block to block the pressure that is
produced by the weight of the masonry and the supper imposed
load if any.
 In such cases the compressive stress on the mortar is as large as on
the blocks themselves.
 The jointing mortar must have satisfactory strength if a durable
masonry is to be built.

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I. Jointing medium in masonry construction

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II. Wall plaster
 Plastering is the process of covering various surfaces of
structure with a plastic material such as cement mortar, lime
mortar or composite mortar, etc. to obtain an even, smooth,
regular, clean and durable surface.
 Plastering conceals inferior quality materials and defective
workmanship and also provides a protective coating against
atmospheric effects.
 It further provides a base for receiving other decorative
finishes such as painting and white washing.
 Wide spread use of mortar.

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 The traditional mortar material for building work was lime, but later
to an increasing extent Portland cement replaced it.
 While the use of lime results in a relatively workable mixture, rapid
development of strength as well as stronger mortar is most
conveniently obtained with Portland cement.
 To combine the advantages compo-mortar is prepared with
appropriate proportion of Portland cement, lime and sand.

Lime mortar 1 part lime, 3 - 4 parts sand; low strength, poor durability but good
workability.
Cement 1 part Portland cement, 3 - 4 parts sand. High strength, harden quickly,
mortar good durability but low workability. Should be used immediately.

Lime –cement 1 part Portland cement, 1 part lime, 6 parts sand. Good strength,
(composite) moderate hardening, good workability and good durability. The
mortar addition of lime increases mortar workability.

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 In order to produce a durable mortar of required strength and other
essential properties at a minimum cost:
 Careful attention must be given to the selection and
proportioning of the component materials.
 The mixture must be workable so that it can be placed and
finished without undue labour.
 Since Portland cement is the most expensive ingredient in the
mixture, the proportion used should be as small as is consistent
with the attainment of desired properties.
 The most accurate method of measuring proportions is by weight,
however, because of its advantage at the site volumetric
proportioning is often used.

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3.1 WORKABILITY
 Properties of mortars vary greatly because they are dependant on
many variables such as:
 The properties of the cementitious materials,
 Ratio of cementitious material to sand,
 Characteristics and grading of sand, and
 Proportion of mixing water.
 For the same proportions, lime-sand mortar invariably gives better
workability than Portland cement-sand mortar.
 Mortar produced from sand of circular grains results in better
workability than those produced from sand of angular grains.
 At times admixtures are used in order to improve the workability of
cement sand mortar.

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3.2 STRENGTH
 Results of tests on mortars and compo-mortars have shown that
strength is affected by a number of factors which include:
 The quality of the ingredients,
 Proportion of the ingredients,
 Water/cement ratio, and
 The curing method and age.
 For the same proportions, lime-sand mix gives weaker mortar than
cement-sand mix. This is mainly due to two main factors:
 Difference in strength b/n Portland cement and lime pastes. For
the same proportions cement gives invariably stronger paste
than lime.
 Portland cement is a better cementing material than lime giving
a better bond b/n the paste and the inert material.

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3.2 STRENGTH (CONT…)
 The compressive, tensile, shear and bending strengths of cement
mortar increases with an increase in the cement content.
 This is true irrespective of the grain size distribution of the sand.
 However, drying shrinkage increases and the mortar becomes
prone to shrinkage cracks.
 The strength as well as the density of mortars made of the same
class of sand decrease as the proportion of fine grains in the sand
increases.
 Increasing the percentage of mixing water beyond that required to
form a placeable mix lowers the strength and density of mortar. And
this effect is greatest at early age.
 The strength of mortar increases with age. The rate of increase is
highest at early age and becomes negligible after a year or so.

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3.2 STRENGTH (CONT…)
 Strength of Portland cement mortars of different proportions made
from fine, medium and coarse sand

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3.3 WATER TIGHTNESS.
 At times mortar is used in in parts of buildings exposed to dampness
or moisture and might be required to be water tight.
 In such case Portland cement should be used because of its
hydraulic property and the mix should be rich and dense.
 Such mortar can be produced by using:
• higher amount of cement,
• lower water cement ratio and
• coarse grained size.
 With the cement content, materials and workability all constant,
strength and degree of water tightness increases with the density of
the mix.

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Cementitious ingredients
Cement
 Cement used for preparing masonry mortars may be:
 Ordinary Portland cement
 Rapid hardening cement
 Blast furnace slag cement
 Portland Pozzolana cement
 Masonry cement
Lime
 If lime mortar is used, lime may be of hydraulic or semi hydraulic
category.
 Prepared lime mortar shall be kept damp and shall never be allowed to
go dry.
 Partly set or dried mortar shall never be retempered for use.

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Sand
 Sand used for making mortar should be well graded, that the
particles should not all be fine nor all coarse.
 If the sand is well graded:
 The finer particles help to occupy the space (voids) b/n the
larger particles.
 A dense mortar which permits the most economical use of
cement and/or lime can be obtained.
 Sand should be clean, free from dust, loam, clay, and vegetable
matter. These foreign particles are objectionable because they:
 Prevent adhesion,
 Reduce strength, and
 Increase porosity.

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Sand
 Silt test should be made at the site
to determine the silt content of the
sand.
 If the silt content is more than 6%,
the sand is unsuitable for mortar
work unless the excess silt is
removed by washing.
Silt test at construction site
 In order to check the amount of
organic matter, colour test could be
made as described in ASTM C40.
Water
 Water for mortar mix should be
clean and free from industrial
wastes.

Trough for washing sand 15


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 Material used for making mortar should be accurately measured,
especially when preparing mortar for wall plaster.
 Cement is usually measured by weight in cement bags whereas wet
slaked lime and sand are measured by volume.
 Each cement bag contains a net weight of 50Kg which corresponds
to about 35 litre loose volume.
 For convenience the other material can be measured using a
measuring box made to hold quantities in multiples of 35 litre.

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 Care should be taken so as to have the sand surface dry. If surface
moisture is present, bulking should be allowed for.
 Mortar is usually mixed at the site, and mixing may be by hand or
mechanical mixer.
 Hand mixing must be done on a proper mixing board which should
be water tight and clean.
 A mortar containing cement should be thoroughly mixed in a dry
state first and then water added before final mixing.
 All cement and cement-lime mortars should be used with in the
first 2 hours of mixing.
 A range of cement-lime-sand mixes in the proportions of 1:½:4½,
1:1:6, 1:3:12 by volume will meet more requirements.

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 Mortar proportions by volume for different purposes.

Purpose (Mortar type) Proportions


For masonry
Cement mortar 1 cem:4-5 sand
Compo mortar 1 cem: 2 lime: 12 sand
For brick laying
Lime mortar 1 lime: 3-4 sand (max. 4mm)
Compo mortar 1 cem:3 lime: 12 sand (max. 4mm)
For plastering
1st and 2nd coat 1 cem:½ lime: 3 sand (max. 4mm)
1 cem:½ lime: 3 sand (max. 4mm)
3rd coat 1 cem:1 lime: 4 sand (max. 4mm)

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THANK YOU!

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