Title: CONCRETE TECHNOLOGY
1CONCRETE TECHNOLOGY
Dr. Ali I. Tayeh
2Syllabus
Topic ??Date Lectures Outline
Introduction. Concrete as a material 1st Week Lectures Outline
Cements 2nd Week Lectures Outline
Mineral Admixtures and Blended Cements 3rd Week Lectures Outline
Water. 4th Week Lectures Outline
Aggregates. 5th Week Lectures Outline
Fresh Concrete 6th Week Lectures Outline
Review and Midterm Exam. 7th Week Lectures Outline
Proportioning Concrete Mixes 8th Week Lectures Outline
Handling and placing. 9th Week Lectures Outline
Curing and strength. 10th Week Lectures Outline
Testing of Hardened Concrete 11th Week Lectures Outline
Durability 12th Week Lectures Outline
Review 13th Week Lectures Outline
Final Exam 14 th Week Lectures Outline
3Chapter 1
Concrete
Concrete as a Material
4Concrete
5Concrete as a Material
- Concrete is a material that literally forms the
basis of our modern society. Scarcely any aspect
of our daily lives does not depend directly or
indirectly on concrete. We may live, work, study,
or play in concrete structures to which we drive
over concrete roads and bridges. - Our goods may be transported by trucks traveling
on concrete super high ways. by trains that run
on rails supported on concrete crossties., by
ships that moor at concrete piers in -harbors
protected by concrete breakwaters, or by
airplanes landing and taking off on concrete
runways. - Water drinking and for raising crops is stored
behind massive concrete dams and is distributed
by systems of concrete waterways., conduits., and
pipes..
6Concrete as a Material
- Concrete plays a key role in oil production,
being used to construct massive off shore
platforms for drilling . - We take concrete for granted in our everyday
activities and tend to be impressed by the more
dramatic impacts of technology. - it can be truly said that many of the
achievements of our modern civilization have
depended on concrete, just as many of the
enduring achievements of the earlier civilization
of Rome were made possible by the use of the
forerunner of modern concrete. - The word concrete comes from the Latin verb
"concretus," which means to grow together.
7The Nature Of Concrete
Concrete is a composite material composed of
coarse granular material (the aggregate or
filler) embedded in a hard matrix of material
(the cement or binder) that fills the space
between the aggregate particles and glues them
together. Aggregates can be obtained from many
different kinds of materials, although we mostly
make use of the materials of nature common rocks.
8The Nature Of Concrete
They are essentially inert, filler materials
that, for convenience. are separated into fine
and coarse factions. Similarly, the cement can be
formulated from many diverse chemicals. "Cement"'
is a generic term that can apply to all binders.
Therefore, descriptors must he used to qualify
this term when referring to specific materials. A
civi1 engineer may have cause to use
9The Nature Of Concrete
Portland cement concrete, calcium aluminates
cement concrete, or polymer concrete ,where the
binders are Portland cement, calcium aluminate
cement, or a polymer resin, respectively. In
concrete construction, the engineer will use
Portland cement concrete 95 of the time. Thus,
for convenience, we will often drop the name
Portland throughout the text and use a qualifying
descriptor only when dealing with other kinds of
cement and concrete.
10The Nature Of Concrete
11The Nature Of Concrete
Portland cement concrete, calcium aluminates
cement concrete, or polymer concrete ,where the
binders are Portland cement, calcium aluminate
cement, or a polymer resin, respectively. In
concrete construction, the engineer will use
Portland cement concrete 95 of the time. Thus,
for convenience, we will often drop the name
Portland through out the text and use a
qualifying descriptor only when dealing with
other kinds of cement and concrete.
12Advantages Of Concrete
- Concrete is the predominant material used in
construction . - It competes directly with all other major
construction materials-timber, steel, asphalt,
stone, etc.- - The major advantages and disadvantages of
concrete are summarized in Table 1.3.Type - all properties of concrete are given in Table 1.4.
13Advantages Of Concrete
- concrete properties can vary significantly from
the figures given, depending on the choice of
materials and proportions of a particular
application. - For example, subsequent chapters will show how
concrete can be designed to have compressive
strengths lt10 MPa (1500 Ib/in.2) or gt 100 MPa
(15,000lb/in.2) with concomitant changes in
modulus of elasticity. - The ability of concrete to be cast to any desired
shape and configuration is an important
characteristic that can offset other shortcomings.
14Advantages Of Concrete
- Concrete can be cast into soaring arches and
columns, complex hyperbolic shells, or into
massive, monolithic section used in dams, piers,
and abutments. On-site. - construction means that local materials can be
used to a large extent, thereby keeping costs
down. Cement costs only about 7-10 cents/kg (3--4
cents/lb) (2001) and aggregates less than 2
cents/kg (lt1 cents/b). - Furthermore. fabricating concrete on site, its
properties may be tailored for the specific
application.
15Advantages Of Concrete
- On the other hand, on-site production is a mixed
blessing because the quality of concrete must be
carefully controlled. Environmental conditions
fluctuate, so that it is difficult to assure
uniform process41g of concrete throughout a job - Constituent materials are less carefully
characterized than they might be and can have
undesirably high variations in properties. The
use of an unskilled or semiskilled work force
means that in the absence of proper supervision
on the job site, undesirable practices they be
adopted and tolerated. - Casting of concrete can also be adapted to
factory-controlled production. - precast building elements for standardized low.
cost building systems arc more common in European
countries, but have also been developed in the
United States.
16Advantages Of Concrete
- precast concrete block has become a very popular
building element, and precast concrete pipe is
widely used in drainage, sewage, and water-supply
projects. - precast, prestressed concrete beams, girders. and
panels in various configurations are used
increasingly in many structures. - precast concrete can be produced more uniformly
with closer tolerances compared to concrete cast
on site, but requires a more skilled work force
and generally more sophisticated equipment. - Good Quality concrete is a very durable material
and should remain maintenance free for many years
when has been properly designed for the service
conditions and properly placed.
17Advantages Of Concrete
- The Advantages Of Concrete
- It has a relatively high compressive strength.
- It has better resistance to fire than steel.
- It has a long service life with low maintenance
cost. - In some types of structures it is the most
economical structure material as dam and footing. - It is easy to form.
- It yields rigid members with minimum apparent
deflection.
18Advantages Of Concrete
- Disadvantages Of Concrete
- It has a low tensile strength of about one tenth
of its compressive strength. - It needs mixing and curing all of which affect
the finial strength of concrete. - The cost of form which will be used in casting is
high - It has low compressive strength with respect to
steel which lead to large section in columns of
multistory buildings. - Cracks develop in concrete due to shrinkage and
application of live loads
19Limitation Of Concrete
- However, concrete does have weaknesses that may
limit its use in certain applications and must be
allowed for when designing structures. - Concrete is a brittle material with very low
tensile strength. - Concrete should generally not be loaded in
tension (except for low bending stresses that may
be permitted in unreinforced slabs on grade), and
reinforcing steel must be used to carry tensile
loads inadvertent tensile loading causes
cracking. The low ductility of concrete also
means that concrete lacks impact strength and
toughness compared to metals.
20Limitation Of Concrete
- Even in compression, concrete has a relatively
low strength-to-weight ratio, and a high load
capacity requires comparatively large masses of
concrete, although, since concrete is low in
cost, this is economically possible. - The volume instability of concrete must also be
allowed for in design and construction. - It shows volume stability that is more
characteristic of timber and quite unlike that of
steel, which is a volume-stable material under
normal conditions of service.
21Limitation Of Concrete
- Concrete undergoes considerable irreversible
shrinkage due to moisture loss at ambient
temperatures and also creeps significantly under
an applied load even under conditions of normal
service. - Awareness of these problems with concrete enables
us to compensate for them, by using suitable
designs and by controlling them, in part, through
a suitable choice of materials and construction
practices.
22Limitation Of Concrete
- A great deal of research effort has been devoted
to ameliorating these problems and now
ready-mixed concrete with compressive strengths
of 100 MPa (15,000 Ib/in.2) can be routinely
produced in some areas. - Over the last 30 years, new types of concrete
have been developed, such as fiber. Reinforced
concrete, shrinkage-compensated concrete, - Cement based materials with flexural strengths
exceeding 150 MPa (22,000 Ib/in.2) or with
tensile - strains greater than 1 have been produced.
23