Properties of Fresh and Hardened Concrete: Rajiv Gandhi Technological University, Bhopal

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R a j i v G a n d h i Te c h n o l o g i c a l U n i v e r s i t

Bhopal

Unit -2,RGPV

PROPERTIES OF FRESH AND


HARDENED CONCRETE

Rishabh Lala
VI SEM
Rajiv Gandhi Technological University,Bhopal

Syllabus Covered (Left Click to enter )


Properties of Fresh (Workability)
Hardened Concrete
(Workability,Permiablitiy,Durablility)
Thermal properties
Micro-cracking of concrete
Mix Design
Rheology
Causes of Damage of Concrete

Introduction:
The potential strength and durability of concrete of a given mix
proportion is very dependent on the degree of its compaction. It
is vital, therefore, that the consistency of the mix be such that
the concrete can be transported, placed, and finished sufficiently
early enough to attain the expected strength and durability.

Properties of Fresh Concrete:


Significance:
The first 48 hours are very important for the performance of the
concrete structure.
It controls the long-term behavior, influence f'c (ultimate
strength), Ec (elastic modulus), creep, and durability.

Properties of Fresh Concrete :


Properties at Early Ages :

Workability
Slump Loss
Segregation/Bleeding
Plastic Shrinkage
Time of Set

Workability :

Definition: Effort required to manipulate a concrete mixture with a


minimum of segregation.
It is not a fundamental property of concrete.
I) consistency (slump)-- easy to flow
II) cohesiveness --tendency to bleed and segregate

Slump Test:

Slump test is a test conducting before concrete to


be used for casting. The purpose of slump test
Is to determine the water content in concrete and its workability

Consistency:

Consistency or fluidity of concrete is an important component of


workability and refers in a way to the wetness of the concrete.
However, it must not be assumed that the wetter the mix the more
workable it is. If a mix is too wet, segregation may occur with resulting
honeycomb, excessive bleeding,
and sand streaking on the formed surfaces.
On the other hand, if a mix is too dry it may be difficult to place and
compact, and segregation may occur because of lack of
cohesiveness and plasticity of the paste.

PROPERTIES OF
HARDENED CONCRETE
The principal properties of hardened concrete
which are of practical importance can be listed
as:
1.
2.
3.
4.

Strength
Permeability & durability
Shrinkage & creep deformations
Response to temperature variations

Of these compressive strength is the most


important property of concrete. Because;

PROPERTIES OF
HARDENED CONCRETE
Of the abovementioned hardened
properties compressive strength
is one of the most important
property that is often required,
simply because;
1. Concrete is used for compressive
loads
2. Compressive strength is easily
obtained
3. It is a good measure of all the other
properties.

STRENGTH OF CONCRETE
The strength of a concrete specimen
prepared, cured and tested under specified
conditions at a given age depends on:
1. w/c ratio
2. Degree of compaction

COMPRESSIVE STRENGTH
Compressive Strength is determined by loading
properly prepared and cured cubic, cylindrical or
prismatic specimens under compression.

COMPRESSIVE STRENGTH
Cubic: 15x15x15 cm
Cubic specimens are crushed after rotating them
90 to decrease the amount of friction caused by
the rough finishing.
Cylinder: h/D=2 with h=15
To decrease the amount of friction, capping of the
rough casting surface is performed.

PERMEABILITY OF CONCRETE
Permeability is important
because:
1. The penetration of some
aggresive solution may
result in leaching out of
Ca(OH)2 which adversely
affects the durability of
concrete.
2. The moisture penetration
depends on permeability & if
concrete becomes saturated
it is more liable to frostaction.
3. In some structural members
permeability itself is of
importance, such as, dams,
water retaining tanks.

DURABILITY
A durable concrete is the one which will
withstand in a satisfactory degree, the effects of
service conditions to which it will be subjected.
Factors Affecting Durability:
External Environmental
Internal Permeability, Characteristics of
ingredients, Air-Void System...

Structure of un-damaged Concrete

Macrostructure

Microstructure

Structure of damaged Concrete


Macrostructure
Visible cracks in hcp
and aggregates due
to volume changes
(to understand
cause of cracks,
microstructure
should be
examined)

Microstructure

Alkali-silica reaction:
Reaction product
forms at TZ and
expands
Frost action: Water
freezes in capillary
pores and expands
Sulfate attack:
reaction products
form in hcp and
expand

LEACHING & EFFLORESCENCE


When water penetrates into concrete, it
dissolves the non-hydraulic CH (and various
salts, sulfates and carbonates of Na, K, Ca)
C-S-H and CH is produced upon hydration of
C3S and C2S
These salts are taken outside of concrete by
water and leave a salt deposit.

SULFATE ATTACK
Ground water in clayey soils
containing alkali sulfates may
affect concrete.
These solutions attack CH to
produce gypsum. Later, gypsum
and calcium alumina sulfates
together with water react to form
ettringite.
Formation of ettringite is
hardened cement paste or
concrete leads to volume
expansion thus cracking.
Moreover, Magnesium sulfate
may lead to the decomposition of
the C-S-H gel.

SULFATE ATTACK
Seawater contains some amount of Na and Mg
Sulfates. However, these sulfates do not cause
severe deleterious expansion/cracking because
both gypsum and ettringite are soluble in
solutions containing the Cl ion. However, problem
with seawater is the frequent wetting/drying and
corrosion of reinforcing steel in concrete.
To reduce the sulfate attack
1. Use low w/c ratio reduced permeability & porosity
2. Use proper cement reduced C3A and C3S
3. Use pozzolans they use up some of the CH to
produce C-S-H

CORROSION

Electrochemical reactions in the steel


rebars of a R/C structure results in
corrosion products which have larger
volumes than original steel.
Thus this volume expansion causes
cracks in R/C. In fact, steel is
protected by a thin film provided by
concrete against corrosion. However,
that shield is broken by CO2 of air or
the Cl- ions.

FREEZING AND THAWING


Water when freezes expands in volume. This will cause
internal hydraulic pressure and cracks the concrete.

To prevent the concrete


from this distress airentraining admixtures are
used to produce airentrained concrete.

MIX DESIGN
Mix design is the process of selecting suitable
ingredients of concrete & determining their relative
quantities with the objective of producing as
economically as possible concrete of certain
minimum properties such as workability, strength &
durability.
So, basic considerations in a mix design is cost &
min. properties.

RHEOLOGY OF CONCRETE
Concrete's and mortar's workability is related to the
rheological properties of the fresh cement paste. The
mechanical properties of hardened concrete increase if less
water is used in the concrete mix design, however reducing
the water-to-cement ratio may decrease the ease of mixing
and application. To avoid these undesired effects,
superplasticizers are typically added to decrease the apparent
yield stress and the viscosity of the fresh paste. Their addition
highly improves concrete and mortar properties
Rheology measurements on concrete indicate that it is
reasonable to approximate the concrete flow behaviour using
a Bingham model.

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