SHOTCRETING
SHOTCRETING
SHOTCRETING
GUNITING
SUBMITTED BY:
RAJAN CHAUAHN
INTRODUCTION
Shotcrete, then known as gunite (/gnt/), was invented in
1907 by American taxidermi Akeley to repair the crumbling
facade of the Field Columbian Museum in Chicago (the old
Palace of Fine Arts from the World's Columbian Exposition.
Until the 1950s when the wet-mix process was devised, only
the dry-mix process was used.
SHOTCRETE
WATER
Portland ADMIXTURES
(FOR WET SAND
Cement OR FIBRES
PROCESS)
The two basic methods for applying shotcrete are the dry-
mix process and the wet-mix process. The term gunite is
frequently used when referring to the dry-mix method;
other terms such as air-placed concrete, gunned concrete
and sprayed concrete have also been used in the past to
describe the process.
1. DRY-MIX SHOTCRETE(GUNITING)
2. WET-MIX SHOTCRETE
1. DRY-MIX SHOTCRETE(GUNITING)
Bridges.
Shotcrete repair can be used for bridge deck
rehabilitation, but it has generally been uneconomical
for major full-thickness repairs.
It is very useful, however, for beam repairs of variable
depths, caps, columns, abutments, wingwalls, and
underdecks from the standpoint of technique and cost.
Buildings.
In building repairs, shotcrete is commonly used for repair
of fire and earthquake damage and deterioration,
strengthening walls, and encasing structural steel for
fireproofing. The repair of structural members such as roof,
beams, columns, and connections is common for structures
damaged by an earthquake.
Marine structures.
Damage to marine structures can result from deterioration
of the concrete and of the reinforcement. Damaging
conditions are corrosion of the steel, freezing and thawing
action, impact loading, structural distress, physical abrasion
from the action of waves, sand, gravel, and floating ice, and
chemical attack due to sulfates. These problems can occur
in most marine structures such as bridge decks, piles, pile
caps, beams, piers, navigation locks, guide walls, dams,
powerhouses, and discharge tunnels. In many cases,
shotcrete can be used to repair the deteriorated surfaces of
these structures.
Spillway surfaces.