Title: Concrete
1Concretemaintaining the Quality
- Achieving durable exterior flatwork in
residential construction
2Objectives
- Review the exterior flatwork problem we face
- Discuss the issues with achieving durable
exterior flatwork - Technical summary
- What can the homebuilding industry do?
3Residential Exterior Flatwork
- Concrete work subcontracted to a finishing
company - Exterior concrete looks great when home is turned
over - Homebuilder hears from unhappy home owner after
1st or 2nd winter - What is the problem? What caused it? Who is
responsible?
4What it looks like
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7What causes it
- Inadequate or no curing and/or
- Inappropriate finishing and/or
- Inappropriate concrete and/or
- Incorrect or no sealing maintenance
- In combination with exposure to freezing
temperatures water ( de-icing chemicals)
8What do we do?
- Must treat achieving durable exterior flatwork as
a chain of important events - Each link must be executed correctly to prevent
deterioration - Industry partners must work together
- Suppliers cannot make a bullet proof concrete
9Achieving Durable Exterior FlatworkTechnical
Review
- Concrete
- Placing
- Finishing
- Curing
- Sealing Maintenance
10Concrete
- Alberta Building Code Canadian Standards
Association require - C-2 Exposure (de-icing chemicals freeze/thaw)
- 32MPa (or 30MPa where indigenous aggregates do
not achieve 32MPa) - 0.45 w/cm
- 5-8 fresh air (3 hardened air with spacing
factor not exceeding 0.23mm) - ARMCA Recommends DURA-MIX
- above requirements and
- 300kg/m3 of cement minimum
11Placing
- Subgrade should be dampened and not frozen
- For more consistent set and improved workability
- CSA A23.1 requires concrete to be placed within
120 minutes from batching - Prolonged mixing results in loss of air, slump
compressive strength - Water should not be added to increase slump above
100mm - Additional water significantly reduces freeze
thaw resistance - Slump over 100mm should be achieved with a high
range water reducer (superplasticizer)
12Finishing
- Minimize handling and do not over vibrate
- Allow bleed water to evaporate before finishing
- Do not use steel trowels (Fresno) or power
trowels on air entrained concrete - CSA A23.1 Steel trowel finish should not be
applied to air-entrained concrete - Blistering or scaling might occur if trowel
finish is applied - Use a magnesium float and concrete broom
13Curing
- Essential for surface durability!
- Must balance 3 critical elements
14Methods of curing
- There are two ways to cure concrete
- 1) add water to the surface to replace the water
that is evaporating - 2) seal the concrete to prevent the water from
evaporating -
- Note adding water to the surface is NOT adding
water that will be worked into the concrete
mix--that would weaken it.
Wet Curing Blankets
Liquid Curing Membrane
Ponding Method
15CSA Curing Table 20
Description 3 d at gt 10 C or for a time
necessary to attain 40 of specified strength
Name Basic
Level 1
7 d at gt 10 C and for a time necessary to attain
70 of specified strength. When using silica
fume concrete additional curing procedures shall
be used See Clause 1.3.13.
Additional
2
A wet-curing period of 7 d. The curing types
allowed are ponding, continuous sprinkling,
absorptive mat or fabric kept continuously wet.
Extended
3
- Note (2) recommends concrete be allowed to air
dry for at least one month after curing before
exposure to de-icing chemicals - C-2 Exposure requires Level 2 curing
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16Hot Weather/Severe Drying
- When surface evaporation is more than
0.50kg/(m2/h) the concrete must be protected - Hot temperatures /or windy conditions _at_ low
relative humidity - Evaporation retardant (Confilm, Profilm etc) is
recommended - Apply as soon as possible
- Do not use as a finishing aid
17High Evaporation Days
- ARMCA website has a tool to calculate evaporation
rate - Input values concrete temperature, air
temperature, relative humidity and wind velocity - July September 2011, of days where protection
was required - Calgary July 29 Sept 24
- Red Deer July 20 Sept 23
- Edmonton July 20 Sept 26
18Cold Weather
- Concrete must not freeze before it has reached
3.5MPa! - Concrete needs a significant portion of design
strength to withstanding freeze thaw cycles - Concrete must be allowed to dry out mature
before first winter - Use of winter heat (warm concrete
accelerators) does not replace required curing
19Cold Weather Construction
- Local municipalities require cold weather
construction practices for pavement placed after
September 30th - CSA A23.1 Level 2 curing required
- 7 days at a minimum of 10 C or the time required
to attain 70 of 28 day strength
20Impact of Temperature on Concrete
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21Long Term Strength Development
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22Sealing Maintenance
- Properly seal the concrete 28 days after concrete
placement before exposure to traffic - Penetrating sealers (silane or siloxane) are
recommended and should be reapplied at least
every 3yrs - Concrete placed after Sept 15 should be sealed
the following spring - Concrete should be cleaned yearly
- Snow and ice should be removed as it accumulates
23De-icing Chemicals
- Avoid whenever possible
- All increase the number of freeze thaw cycles
some attack the concrete matrix - Especially damaging in the first winter when
concrete hasnt reached its full strength - Sand is the recommended product to improve
traction on ice - Most of the de-icing chemicals present on
driveways come from tire transfer from city roads - If all the links in the chain are executed
correctly exterior flatwork can withstand
exposure to standard de-icing chemicals
24Achieving Durable Exterior FlatworkHomebuilder
Influence
- Insist on DURA-MIX test concrete before placing
- Insist on certified journeyman finishers
- Insist finishers use appropriate curing methods
for the environmental conditions - Provide home owners with the appropriate
information regarding sealing maintenance
25The Challenge
After 1 year of strengthening the links in the
chain do you have
or
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26Questions?
27ARMCA Residential Committee
- Committee reinstated in 2011
- Looking for more representation
- Home Builders
- Finishers
- If interested contact Ed Kalis _at_ ARMCA