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Title: Multigrade,


1
Multigrade,
Multivariable,.
Cusum Quality Control
  • Ken W Day

2
Multigrade, Multivariable, Cusum QC
  • In October last year I gave a paper Concrete in
    the 22nd Century to the Concrete Institute of
    Australia Biennial, trying to look as far as
    possible into the future.
  • Now however I have chosen to look into the past
    because my largest contribution to concrete
    technology is evidently still not universally
    understood.

3
Multigrade, Multivariable, Cusum QC
  • It took 25 years from the early 1950s to the late
    1970s to perfect my technique for analysing
    concrete compression test data.
  • In the 25 years since then, the technique has
    spread widely as part of the ConAd QC program
  • but still not fully incorporated in any national
    or international code of practice.
  • So I want to take this opportunity to present its
    exact basic concepts.

4
Multigrade, Multivariable, Cusum QC
  • I need to present each of the three major
    components
  • Multigrade,
  • Multivariable
  • Cusum
  • and to add to them one further item
  • Prediction from early age tests.
  • I will take the three major components in reverse
    order

5
Cusum cumulative sum analysis
  • I did not invent cusum,
  • It was developed in the UK chemical industry
    (Woodward and Goldsmith, 1964)
  • first used for concrete QC in the UK in the 1970s
    (Testing Services, 1970).
  • I started to apply it some six months later
    (independently of the Testing Services
    development).

6
Cusum cumulative sum analysis
  • Cusum involves subtracting a target value from
    each result and maintaining a cumulative sum of
    the remainders.
  • Its main value is that it detects a change in a
    string of results about three times as quickly as
    a normal Shewhart Chart.
  • Detection can be by mathematical analysis of the
    string of cumulative sums, or by graphing the
    cumulative sums.
  • The graphical method is preferable because it is
    easier to detect and eliminate false changes due
    to testing error or abnormal circumstances.

7
Cusum (cumulative sum analysis)
  • My major contribution is to use the continuously
    updated current average of a variable as the
    target.
  • This focuses the cusum on detection of change
    rather than adherence to a selected target.
  • It also has huge significance for the ease of
    combining very large numbers of grades of
    concrete in a single cusum analysis.

8
Cusum chart
9
Use of V mask to detect change
10
Cusum graph exhibiting false change
11
Multivariable
  • Multivariable relates to including graphs of
    other variables such as
  • density,
  • workability,
  • temperature,
  • tests on constituent materials such as cement
    strength and sand grading,
  • also average pair difference of 28day results
    (to detect any deterioration in testing quality)
    all on the same sheet as concrete
    strength.

12
Multivariable
  • I started to do this in my first year in the
    concrete business (1952)
  • but the idea still does not seem to have been
    fully accepted by the UK QSRMC (Quality Scheme
    for Ready Mix Concrete), even though I have
    presented papers there on two occasions.
  • The concept is that changes in concrete strength
    will be mirrored in, and so confirmed and
    explained by, changes in one or more of the other
    variables.

13
Multigrade
  • Multigrade relates to combining the results of
    several (or many) grades of concrete in a single
    analysis.
  • If done effectively, this gives an equivalent
    effect to increasing the frequency of testing
    many times over.

14
Multigrade
  • EN206, the European quality scheme, does this to
    a limited extent but makes hard work of it and
    has to limit it to a few similar grades of
    concrete.
  • EN206 combines grades by adjusting or converting
    the results of other grades so that they can be
    analysed as though from a selected control grade.
  • This requires initial and continued effort to set
    up and continually adjust the conversion process
    to be fully effective.

15
Multigrade
  • I have been happily applying my version to
    combining the results from hundreds of grades of
    widely different character with no human effort
    required (the computer does it all) for more than
    20 years.
  • My technique is to cusum departures from the
    various current average values as though these
    were all from the same average value.
  • While I was initially dubious of this, I have
    found that it works beautifully for strengths of
    20MPa or less to strengths of 100MPa or more, and
    including normal dense and structural lightweight
    concrete in the same analysis.

16
Multigrade, Multivarible Cusum
17
Early Age Prediction
  • Normally early age means something of the order
    of 3 to 7days
  • My contribution for normal results has been to
    recognize that a more useful prediction is
    obtained by adding the average gain to the early
    result than by assuming a percentage increase.
  • This is because the early age result tends to be
    of a single specimen and to be subject to more
    than usual error. Applying a percentage increase
    multiplies the effect of any error.

18
(No Transcript)
19
The free QC program
20
Free Programs
  • I should warn you that the free programs are not
    likely to remain free permanently (other than on
    a demonstration basis) owing to a recent
    partnership between Contek, Shilstone and myself

21
Early Age Prediction
  • For very early results it is necessary to have a
    temperature history record and to express the age
    as an Arrhenius Equivalent Age (EA) rather than a
    physical age.
  • The concept (and a competing but less accurate
    concept of temperature x time maturity) is well
    known but the usual technique is to construct a
    strength v maturity (or EA) graph, measure the
    maturity (or EA), and read off the strength.

22
Early Age Prediction
  • Construction of the calibration graph requires
    substantial effort
  • A more serious fault is that this technique
    assumes that the concrete is the same as that
    used to construct the graph and so cannot react
    to changes in concrete quality and cannot be used
    for QC.

23
Early Age Prediction
  • I have devised a simple program that continuously
    and automatically feeds back and corrects the
    Arrhenius constants so that predictions of 28day
    strength (and any other desired age) based on the
    actual concrete in question can be obtained
    within a few hours.
  • Such results can be used for QC where the
    additional expense of temperature monitoring is
    considered justified

24
Combined Effect
  • The real power of my overall system lies in the
    way that these separate elements combine
    together.
  • It is the way I do cusum that enables such
    widespread multigrading,
  • the use of cusum that links multivariables, and
  • the use of multivariables to confirm and explain
    the detection of change.
  • these features enable the detection and cause of
    change to be established several weeks earlier
    than most (all?) other control systems.

25
Combined Effect
  • The earlier detection and trend rectification
    itself reduces the overall variability of the
    concrete being produced
  • and I have demonstrated that the number of
    results required to detect a given change is
    directly proportional to their basic variability.

26
Availability of the Technique
  • The technique was made substantially available as
    a Lotus spreadsheet in a series of 10 articles
    appearing bi-monthly in Concrete International in
    1988-89.
  • Apart from this it has only been available as
    part of the ConAd computer program, marketed by
    the authors company, Concrete Advice Pty. Ltd.
    in the 1990s, and now, since the sale of that
    company, by Command Alkon Inc.

27
Availability of the Technique
  • To enable the basic technique to become a
    standard item, available to all, there is now a
    free program available on my website
    www.kenday.id.au.
  • This program falls far short of ConAd in many
    respects but it does enable all the features
    presented here to be employed,
  • with the exception that the multivariables
    available are limited to strength, density,
    slump, and temperature and only eight cusum
    graphs can be drawn.

28
Specification of Concrete
  • While not the subject of the current address, a
    few words on this subject may be helpful.
    Although it has taken 50 years in some cases, it
    seems that the whole world is coming to accept a
    view I have been presenting since the early
    1950s. In 1958 I wrote
  • The only rational objective for any but 100
    testing is not to discover and reject faulty
    products but to ascertain the minimum quality
    level of the production.

29
Specification of Concrete
  • The article went on to assert that the only
    really fair and effective basis for quality
    regulation is the imposition of a cash penalty
    for marginally defective concrete based on a
    statistical analysis of test data.
  • I am still of that opinion, even though (so far!)
    it does not appear to be shared by anyone else in
    the world.
  • maybe another 50 years?

30
Specification of Concrete
  • An effective control system must have two quite
    separate and to some extent opposing features.
  • One is to form a very accurate view of the mean
    strength and variability of the concrete supplied
    to date (no hurry).
  • The other is to detect as quickly as possible
    when the quality of the concrete being supplied
    changes (no requirement for accuracy or
    infallibility).
  • Any attempt to combine the two is likely to fail
    to accomplish either.

31
Summary and Conclusion
  • 1) Test data (including specimen density) should
    be entered in the system on the day it is
    obtained and visually assessed daily using
    automatically generated multigrade,
    multivariable, cusum graphs.

32
Summary and Conclusion
  • 2) Cusum analyses should use the constantly
    updated average values of all variables as a
    target rather than a specified target.

33
Summary and Conclusion
  • 3) Data should multigraded by cusuming these
    differences as though from the same mean rather
    than transforming results to a control grade.

34
Summary and Conclusion
  • 4) Data should include strength at 7days or
    earlier transformed into a 28day strength
    prediction by adding the current average gain.
    Prediction should NOT involve any assumption that
    a low early age result is likely to also show a
    lower subsequent gain.

35
Summary and Conclusion
  • 5) The daily assessment should include at least
    the first few rows of a table ranking all grades
    in order of departure of current and predicted
    mean strengths from their target values.
  • 6) Cusums should include average pair difference
    of 28day results as an indication of testing
    quality.
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