CE5604-Advanced Concrete Technology: - History and Origins - Greeks: Addition of
CE5604-Advanced Concrete Technology: - History and Origins - Greeks: Addition of
CE5604-Advanced Concrete Technology: - History and Origins - Greeks: Addition of
• Eliminate vibration
• Reduce noise
• Save manpower
• Suitable for heavily
reinforced
structures
Regular concrete:
irregularities, bug-holes,
and surface defects
• Reading materials
(4) Cooling
-Liquid phase
solidify to produce
hard clinker
-Exit temp 1000-
(1) Evaporation: free water lost 1200 oC
(2) Calcination
– Water from Argillaceous materials lost at ~600 C
– CO2 from limestone lost at ~900 C (CaCO3 CaO + CO2)
– Calcium aluminates and ferrites form at ~1200 C, act as fluxes,
melting at ~1350 C to begin the clinkering zone
• Grinding
– A small amount of gypsum is interground with the
clinker nodules (6-50 mm)
• to control the early reactions of calcium aluminate
• to avoid flash setting
• Economic consideration
In pastes of pure
compounds
In a Type I ordinary
Portland cement
Compressive strength development
• C3S provides
most of the
early
strength (in
the first 3-4
weeks)
• Both C3S
and C2S
contributes
to ultimate
strength
Type of Portland Cement (ASTM)
• Type I – ordinary portland cement (OPC)
– most commonly used in construction
• Type II – Modified cement
– Moderate sulphate resistance
– Moderate heat of hydration
• Type III – Rapid hardening portland cement (RHPC)
– Used for obtaining high early strength, cold weather
concreting, precast concrete
• Type IV – Low heat portland cement (LHPC)
– Used for mass concrete, hot weather concreting
• Type V – Sulphate resisting portland cement (SRPC)
– Used in situation where ground water or soil have high
sulphate contents
Types of Portland Cement
Rate of heat evolution measured as temperature rise of
mass concrete stored under adiabatic conditions
Strength of concrete made with different cements
0.658
Physical and Performance Tests
• Fineness
– Important as it affects the rate of cement hydration
– Blaine air-permeability method (ASTM C 204): determine
specific surface
• Time of setting:
– refers to continuous stiffening of cement paste, defined as
time since the addition of water to the point at which
cement paste reaches a certain stiffness
• Initial set – indicates that the paste is beginning to
stiffen considerably and can no longer be molded
• Final set – indicates that the cement paste has
hardened to the point at which it can sustain some load
– Methods: ASTM C 191 by Vicat needle or ASTM C 266 by
Gillmore needle
Physical and Performance Tests
• Unsoundness
– Autoclave expansion test (ASTM C 151)
– Excessive expansion indicates unsoundness (excess
MgO or excess free lime)
• Heat of hydration
– Defined as the amount of heat evolved during setting and
hardening of portland cement at a given temperature
measured in J/g of unhydrated cement
– Heat of solution method (ASTM C 186)
– Limits: Type II and Type IV cements (Table 3-10)
• Compressive strength
– ASTM C 109, 50-mm mortar cubes, sand/cement ratio
2.75/1, w/c=0.485 for all portland cements, w/c=0.460 for
air-entraining portland cement
– Singapore (follow EN 196) 40x40x160 mm prism