Title: Chapter 2. Using Silica Fume in Concrete
1Chapter 2. Using Silica Fume in Concrete
- Enhancing Mechanical Properties
- Improving Durability
- Enhancing Constructability
- Producing High-Performance Concrete Bridges
2Silica Fume is Not a Cement Replacement Material!
3Enhancing Mechanical Properties
Chapter Outline
4Increased Concrete Strength
Enhancing Mechanical Properties
- High-rise columns
- Precast bridge beams
5Silica-Fume Concrete Typical Strengths
15
10
5
0
Control mixture cement 658 lb/yd3 w/c
0.41 air 5
0 3 7 28
60
Age, days
6Silica-Fume Concrete Typical Strengths
15
10
5
0
Control mixture cement 390 kg/m3 w/c
0.41 air 5
0 3 7 28
60
Age, days
7High-Strength Silica-Fume Concrete
cement 950 lb/yd3 silica fume 150
lb/yd3 w/cm 0.220 air 1.1
8High-Strength Silica-Fume Concrete
cement 564 kg/m3 silica fume 89 kg/m3 w/cm
0.220 air 1.1
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10Why Use High-Strength Concrete?
Column design load 10,000 kips
11Why Use High-Strength Concrete?
Column design load 50 MN
12Increased Modulus of Elasticity
Enhancing Mechanical Properties
13Key Bank Tower Cleveland, Ohio High-strength
(12,000 psi), high-modulus (6.8 million psi)
concrete columns were specified at the corners of
this structure to stiffen against wind sway.
14Key Bank Tower Cleveland, Ohio High-strength
(83 MPa), high-modulus (47 GPa) concrete columns
were specified at the corners of this structure
to stiffen against wind sway.
15Improving Durability
Chapter Outline
16Decreased Permeability for Corrosion-Resisting
Concrete
Improving Durability
- Parking structures
- Bridge decks
- Marine structures
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21Silica-Fume ConcreteCorrosion Protection
- 5-10 silica fume added by mass of cement
- Mixture may include fly ash or slag
- w/cm lt 0.40 use HRWRA
- Total cementitious materials lt 700 lb/yd3
- Permeability estimated using ASTM C 1202
22Silica-Fume ConcreteCorrosion Protection
- 5-10 silica fume added by mass of cement
- Mixture may include fly ash or slag
- w/cm lt 0.40 use HRWRA
- Total cementitious materials lt 415 kg/m3
- Permeability estimated using ASTM C 1202
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24Silica-Fume Concrete Typical Values
Silica fume RCP
Compressive Strength (by mass of cement)
0 gt 3,000 coulombs 5,000
psi 7-10 lt 1,000 coulombs gt 7,000
psi gt10 lt 500 coulombs gt 9,000 psi
Dont fall into strength trap!
25Silica-Fume Concrete Typical Values
Silica fume RCP
Compressive Strength (by mass of cement)
0 gt 3,000 coulombs 35 MPa 7-10
lt 1,000 coulombs gt 50 MPa gt10 lt
500 coulombs gt 65 MPa
Dont fall into strength trap!
26What About Simply Reducing w/cm to Achieve
Durability?
The results clearly indicate that silica fume
was effective in reducing the Rapid Chloride
Permeability Test values regardless of the
curing regimes applied. Moreover, silica fume
enhanced chloride resistance more than reducing
w/cm. This effect was confirmed by the diffusion
tests. --
Hooton et al. 1997
27w/cm reduction versus adding silica fume
w/cm sf RCP
Diffusivity
(coulombs) (m2/s E-12)
28w/cm reduction versus adding silica fume
29Capitol South Parking Structure Columbus,
OH 5,000 parking spaces
30Bridge Deck Overlay Ohio DOT
31Increased Abrasion Resistance
Improving Durability
32Kinzua Dam Western Pennsylvania
33Abrasion-erosion damage to the stilling basin of
Kinzua Dam
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35Improved Chemical Resistance
Improving Durability
36Silica-Fume Concrete Chemical Resistance
Days to 25 Mass Loss
1 HCl 1 Lactic Acid 5
(NH4)2SO4 5 Acetic Acid 1 H2SO4
37Silica-Fume Concrete Chemical Resistance
Cycles to 25 Mass Loss
1 5 5
5 H2SO4 Acetic Formic H2SO4
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40Enhancing Constructability
Chapter Outline
41Improve Shotcrete
Enhancing Constructability
42Silica-fume shotcrete
43Benefits of Silica Fume in Shotcrete
- Reduction of rebound loss up to 50
- Increased one-pass thickness up to 12 in. (300
mm) - Higher bond strength
- Improved cohesion to resist washout in tidal
rehabilitation of piles and seawalls
44Increase Early StrengthControl Temperature
Enhancing Constructability
45Nuclear Waste Storage Facility Hanford, WA
46These massive walls include portland cement, fly
ash, and silica fume to reduce heat and to
provide early strength for form removal.
47Fast-Track Finishing
Enhancing Constructability
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49Producing High-Performance Concrete Bridges
Chapter Outline
50Why Use High-Performance Concrete in Bridges?
- High strength -- girders and beams
- High durability -- decks, sidewalks, parapets,
piles, piers, pier caps, and splash zones
51Why High-Strength HPC?
- Longer spans
- Increased beam spacings
- Shallower sections for same span
52The use of high-strength concrete in the
fabrication and construction of pretensioned
concrete girder bridges can result in lighter
bridge designs, with corresponding economic
advantages, by allowing longer span lengths and
increased girder spacings for standard shapes.
-- B. W.
Russell
PCI Journal
53Ohio HPC Bridge
54New Hampshire HPC Bridge
55Colorado HPC Bridge
56For High-Strength Bridges, You Must Consider
- Design issues
- Larger diameter strand
- Take advantage of strength of high-durability
concretes
57For High-Strength Bridges, You Must Consider
- Concrete materials and proportioning issues
- Random approach to trial mixtures may not be best
approach - Conduct full-scale testing of selected mixture
58For High-Strength Bridges, You Must Consider
- Construction issues
- Bed capacities
- Curing temperatures
- Transportation and erection limitations
59Why High-Durability HPC?
- Reduced maintenance costs
- Longer life
- Life-cycle costing
60The results of this study indicate that there
are no fundamental reasons why use of silica fume
concrete in bridge deck applications should not
continue to grow as high-performance concretes
become an increasingly important part of bridge
construction.
-- Whiting and Detwiler
NCHRP Report 410
61One approach to improving the durability of
concrete bridge decks exposed to chlorides in
service is to reduce the rate at which chlorides
can enter the concrete.
62Silica-Fume Concrete Long-Term Performance
- Illinois State Route 4, bridge over I-55
- Constructed 1973
- October, 1986 southbound lane repaired with
dense concrete, w/cm 0.32 - March, 1987 northbound lane repaired with
silica-fume concrete, w/cm 0.31, sf 11
63Illinois State Route 4, Bridge over I-55
Percent chloride by mass of concrete
64What About Cracking of HPC Silica-Fume Concrete
Bridge Decks?
65NCHRP Project 18-3
- Silica-fume concretes tend to crack only when
they are insufficiently moist-cured. - If silica-fume concrete mixtures are given 7 days
of continuous moist curing, there is then no
association between silica fume content and
cracking.
66New York State DOT Review
- Since April, 1996, NYSDOT has used HPC concrete
in its bridge decks to reduce cracking and
permeability. - Class HP concrete
- Portland cement 500 lb/yd3
- Fly ash 135 lb/yd3
- Silica fume 40 lb/yd3
- w/cm 0.40
67New York State DOT Review
- Since April, 1996, NYSDOT has used HPC concrete
in its bridge decks to reduce cracking and
permeability. - Class HP concrete
- Portland cement 300 kg/m3
- Fly ash 80 kg/m3
- Silica fume 25 kg/m3
- W/CM 0.40
68New York State DOT Review
- 84 HPC bridge decks were inspected -- 49 showed
no cracking - Results indicated that Class HP decks performed
better than previously specified concrete in
resisting both longitudinal and transverse
cracking.
69Interstate 15 rebuilding project in Salt Lake
City 144 bridges, all with silica-fume concrete
decks!
70Need more information on HPC for Bridges?
71PCAs new HPC Bridge Booklet
72Can HPC Reduce the Life-Cycle Cost of a Bridge?
- High-strength HPC -- Possibly
- High-durability HPC -- Probably
73End of Chapter 2
Main Outline