Title: The Structure of Concrete
12
The Structure of Concrete
- DEFINITIONS
- SIGNIFICANCE
- COMPLEXITIES
- STRUCTURE OF THE AGGREGATE PHASE
- STRUCTURE OF HYDRATED CEMENT PASTE
- TRANSITION ZONE IN CONCRETE
- Siddharth shankar
2DEFINITIONS
- The type, amount, size, shape, and distribution
of phases present in a solid constitute its
structure. - The gross elements of the structure of a material
can readily be seen, whereas the finer elements
are usually resolved with the help of a
microscope. - The term macrostructure is generally used for the
gross structure, visible to the human eye. - The limit of resolution of the unaided human eye
is approximately one-fifth of a millimiter (200
µm). - The term microstructure is used for the
microscopically magnified portion of a
macrostructure.
3Modern electron microscopes
- The magnification capability of modern electron
microscopes is of the order of 105 times thus
the application of transmission and scanning
electron microscopy techniques has made it
possible to resolve the structure of materials to
a fraction of a micrometer.
4SIGNIFICANCE
- Progress in the field of materials has resulted
primarily from recognition of the principle that
the properties of a material originate from its
internal structure. - The properties can be modified by making
suitable changes in the structure of a material.
5COMPLEXITIES
- From examination of a cross section of concrete,
the two phases that can easily be distinguished
are aggregate particles of varying size and shape
and the binding medium, composed of an incoherent
mass of the hydrated cement paste (henceforth
abbreviated hcp).
6Macroscopic level
- At the macroscopic level, therefore, concrete may
be considered to be a two-phase material,
consisting of aggregate particles dispersed in a
matrix of the cement paste.
7Microscopic level
- At the microscopic level, the complexities of the
concrete structure begin to show up. It becomes
obvious that the two phases of the structure are
neither homogeneously distributed with respect to
each other, nor are they themselves homogeneous. - For instance, in some areas the hcp mass appears
to be as dense as the aggregate while in others
it is highly porous.
8 (a) ??????
(b)?????????????
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9
10Three-phase theory
- Three phases
- Aggregate
- Hardened cement paste (hcp)
- Transition (interface) zone??
11THREE PHASES OF CONCRETE
12STRUCTURE OF THE AGGREGATE PHASE
13AGGREGATE PHASE
- The aggregate phase is predominantly responsible
for the unit weight, elastic modulus, and
dimensional stability of concrete. - These properties of concrete depend to a large
extent on the bulk density and strength of the
aggregate, which, in turn, are determined by the
physical rather than chemical characteristics of
the aggregate structure. - In other words, the chemical or mineralogical
composition of the solid phases in aggregate is
usually less important than the physical
characteristics such as the volume, size, and
distribution of pores.
14Aggregate particles
- Natural gravel has a rounded shape and a smooth
surface texture. - Crushed rocks have a rough texture depending on
the rock type and the choice of crushing
equipment, the crushed aggregate may contain a
considerable proportion of fault or elongated
particles, which adversely affect many properties
of concrete. - Lightweight aggregate particles from pumice,
which is highly cellular, are also angular and
have a rough texture, but those from expanded
clay or shale are generally rounded and smooth.
15STRUCTURE OF HYDRATED CEMENT PASTE
- Anhydrous portland cement is a gray powder that
consists of angular particles typically in the
size range 1 to 50 µm. - It is produced by pulverizing a clinker with a
small amount of calcium sulfate, the clinker
being a heterogeneous mixture of several minerals
produced by high temperature reactions between
calcium oxide and silica, alumina, and iron
oxide.
16STRUCTURE OF HYDRATED CEMENT PASTE
- The chemical composition of the principal clinker
minerals coresponds approximately to C3S, C2S,
C3A, and C4AF in ordinary portland cement their
respective amounts usually range between 45 and
60, 15 and 30, 6 and 12, and 6 and 8 percent.
17Hydration process
- Setting Solidification of the plastic cement
paste - Initial set beginning of solidification Paste
become unworkable loss in consistency - not lt
45 min. - Final set Time taken to solidify completely
Not gt 375min. - Hardening Strength gain with time after final
set
18Crystal formation of Cement
19Calcium silicate hydrate
- The calcium silicate hydrate phase, abbreviated
C-S-H, makes up 50 to 60 percent of the volume of
solids in a completely hydrated portland cement
paste and is, therefore, the most important in
determining the properties of the paste. - The fact that the term C-S-H is hyphenated
signifies that C-S-H is not a well-defined
compound the C/S ratio varies between 1.5 to 2.0
and the structural water content varies even more.
20Calcium silicate hydrate
- The morphology of C-S-H also varies from poorly
crystalline fibers to reticular network. Due to
their colloidal dimensions and a tendency to
cluster, C-S-H crystals could only be resolved
with the advent of electron microscopy. - Although the exact structure of C-S-H is not
known, several models have been proposed to
explain the properties of the materials.
According to the Powers-Brunauer model, the
material has a layer structure with a very high
surface area.
21Calcium hydroxide
- Calcium hydroxide crystals (also called
portlandite) constitute 20 to 25 percent of the
volume of solids in the hydrated paste. In
contrast to the C-S-H, the calcium hydroxide is a
compound with a definite stoichiometry?????,
Ca(OH)2. - It tends to form large crystals with a
distinctive hexagonal-prism morphology. The
morphology usually varies from nondescript to
stacks of large plates, and is affected by the
available space, temperature of hydration, and
impurities present in the system.
22Calcium hydroxide
- Compared with C-S-H, the strength-contributing
potential of calcium hydroxide due to van der
Waals forces is limited as a result of a
considerably lower surface area. - Also, the presence of a considerable amount of
calcium hydroxide in hydrated portland cement has
an adverse effect on chemical durability to
acidic solutions because of the higher solubility
of calcium hydroxide than C-S-H.
23Mono-Sulfoaluminate Ettringite
24Ettringite
25Calcium sulfoaluminates
- Calcium sulfoaluminate compounds occupy 15 to 20
percent of the solids volume in the hydrated
paste and therefore play only a minor role in the
structure-property relationships. - It has already been stated that during the early
stages of hydration the sulfate/alumina ionic
ratio of the solution phase generally favors the
formation of trisulfate hydrate, C6AS3H32, also
called ettringite, which forms needle-shaped
prismatic crystals.
26Reaction rate C3A gt C3S gt C4AF gtC2S
27(No Transcript)
28Heat of hydration (Cal/g)
Compound 3 days 90 days 13 years
C3S 58 104 122
C2S 12 42 59
C3A 212 311 324
C4AF 69 98 102
29Three-phase theory-Transition zone
30Three-phase theory-Transition zone
- A thin shell layer (10-50 µm thick) around large
aggregate. - Formation Water films around large aggregate
during mixing. - Characteristic Larger CH crystals more porous
framework relatively weak.?? ??
31Transition Zone
Miexhta and Monteiro Concrete
32Transition zone -Influence on concrete
properties
- Fraction of transition zone in size is much
smaller than other two phases, its influence on
concrete properties is far greater. - It lower the strength
- It increase the permeability
- It prompt non-linear behavior
- It favorites crack formation
33Microstructural improvement
- Use of silica fume
- reduce the porosity of the ITZ geometrical effect
(no space) reduces the amount of CH due to
pozzolanic reaction