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(30 pts)
1. What is the significance of the critical stress
a) with respect to the structure of the concrete?
- A continuous pattern of mortar cracks begins to form. As a result, there are few
undamaged portions to carry load and the stress-strain curve is highly nonlinear.
b) with respect to to spiral reinforcement?
- At the critical stress the lateral strain begins to increase rapidly. This causes the concrete
core within the spiral to expand, stretching the spiral. The tension in the spiral is equilibrated by
a radial compression in the core. This in turn, biaxially compresses the core, and thus strengthens
it.
c) with respect to strength under sustained load?
- When concrete is subjected to sustained loads greater than the critical stress, it will
eventually fail.
(20 pts)
2. The concrete containing Type I cement in a structure is cured for 3 days at 21 deg Celsius,
followed by 6 days at 4.4 deg Celsius. Use the maturity concept to estimate its strength as a
fraction of a 28-day strength under standard curing.
(20 pts)
3. What factor/s affect the shrinkage and creep of concrete?
factors affect the shrinkage of concrete
- (a) Relative humidity. Shrinkage increases as the relative humidity decreases, reaching a
maximum at RH ≤ 40%.
- (b) The fraction of the total volume made up of paste. As this fraction increases,
shrinkage increases.
- (c) The modulus of elasticity of the aggregate. As these increases, shrinkage decreases.
- (d) The water/cement ratio. As the water content increases, the aggregate fraction
decreases, causing an increase in shrinkage.
- (e) The fineness of the cement. Shrinkage increases for finely ground cement that has
more surface area to attract and absorb water.
-(f) The effective thickness or volume to surface ratio. As this ratio increases, the
shrinkage occurs more slowly and the total shrinkage is likely reduced.
- (g) Exposure to carbon dioxide tends to increase shrinkage.