Concrete Technology: S. Surendhar, M.E
Concrete Technology: S. Surendhar, M.E
Concrete Technology: S. Surendhar, M.E
S. SURENDHAR, M.E.
Concrete Technology
• Concrete technology deals with the study of
properties of concrete and its practical
applications.
• Concrete is one of the widely used construction
material across the world and hence it becomes
essential to have a better understanding of it
Concrete
• Concrete is a composite construction material
consisting of hard, chemically inert aggregates
that is bonded together by pasty substance usually
made of a binding material mixed with water
• Cement is the most commonly used binding
material.
Cement Concrete ingredients
Cement Binder
Hydration
Concrete Workability
Water
Curing
Admixtures Chemicals
Types of Concrete
• Cement concrete
• Lime concrete
• Light weight concrete
• Modified / Special concrete
Cement
• Cement is a binder, a material used in construction
that sets, hardens and adheres to other materials
to bind them together
Ingredients and Sources
Lime : limestone, chalk, shells, shale or calcareous rock
Silica : from sand, old bottles, clay or argillaceous rock
Alumina : from bauxite, recycled Aluminum,
clay Iron : from clay, iron ore, scrap iron and fly
2 Burning
3 Grinding
Calcareous material Argillaceous material
1
(Lime stone) (Clay)
Crushing Crushing
Mixing of
raw materials Grinding
Ball mill Ball mill
Grinding
Tube mill Tube mill
Storage Storage
basin basin
Pre-heating @ 800oC
Storage tank
2 Burning
Heated air
Raw
materials
Clinker
forming
temperature
1
25
(1 in 25 to 1 in
30)
Cooling zone
Clinker
3-20 mm
95oC
Rotary kiln
3 Grinding
Add 4 % gypsum
Ball mill (large balls)
Tube mill (Small balls)
Characteristics of cement
High compressive strength
Flexible and easy mouldable
Easy to handle and use
Good binding property
Cement never gets rusted
Cement is a bad
conductor of electricity
Types of cement
1. Ordinary Portland Cement
2. Rapid Hardening Cement
3. Extra Rapid Hardening Cement
4. Sulphate Resisting Cement
5. Portland Slag Cement
6. Quick Setting Cement
7. Super Sulphated Cement
8. Low Heat Cement
9. Portland Pozzolana Cement – fly ash based and calcined clay based
Grades
• 33 Grade min 33 N/mm2 strength (M20)
• 43 Grade min 43 N/mm2 strength (Normal RCC works)
• 53 Grade min 53 N/mm2 strength
Progressive strength
early stage strength
Uses
• Concreting in cold weather
4 Sulphate Resisting Cement
Uses
• Sewage treatment works, marine structures
5 Portland Slag Cement
Uses
• RCC
6 Quick Setting Cement
• Sets fastly
• Alumnina ↑
• Gypsum ↓
• Initial setting time = 5 minutes
• Final setting time = 30 minutes
Uses
• Pumping Concrete works
7 Super Sulphated Cement
Uses
• Marine works
8 Low Heat Cement
Uses
• Afraid of water !!
• Reduces wetting ability of cement
• Helps to reduce w/c ratio
• Contains admixtures – Acidol
- Napthene soap
- Oxidized petrolatum
• frost and water resistance
11 Acid resistant cement
5 – 10 % pigment
Chromium oxide - Green
Cobalt - Blue
Manganese dioxide –
Black/Brown
13 Expanding cement
Expanding agent: Sulpho Aluminate
14 High Alumina cement
Alumina ↑ – 32 % - Quick setting
𝟏
Initial setting time = 3𝟐 𝐡𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐬
1. Fineness
2. Specific gravity
3. Consistency
4. Setting time
5. Soundness
6. Compressive strength
7. Tensile strength
Field testing of cement
1. Open the bag and take a good look at the cementc- no visible lumps.
4. Take a pinch of cement and feel (rub) between the fingers, It should
give a smooth feeling and not a gritty feeling
5. When we throw the cement on a bucket full of water, before it
sinks the particle should float
1 Fineness Test on Cement
Degree to which the cement is grinded
into smaller and smaller particles
Apparatus required:
𝐰𝟐−𝒘𝟏
Gc = x Gk
𝒘𝟒−𝒘𝟏 −(𝒘𝟑−𝒘𝟐)
Standard/Normal Consistency
Standard Plunger (10 mm dia, 50 mm long)
weighing balance
Vicat apparatus
Trowel
+ Cement paste
Gauging time
( 3-5 minutes)
400 g cement 25 % water by
weight of dry cement
Note the
distance b/w Boil 3 hrs – reach boiling Note the distance b/w pointers
pointers after Cool point within 25-30 minutes before boiling – d1
boiling – d2
6 Compressive strength of cement
Classification of rocks
Molten/pasty
rocky material
High
temperature
Igneous rocks
Weathering Transportation
Sedimentation
Examples
Chalk
Kankar
Limestone
Sandstone
Gravel
Gypsum
Types of Deposits
Eg: Bacteria
Vegetable wastes, human Soil (Organic deposits)
3 Metamorphic rocks
Formed by the change in
character of pre-existing rocks.
Agents:
Heat, Pressure, Chemically acting fluids
Igneous agents Change-in re-establish Metamorphic
Sedimentary loss eqm equilibrium rocks
character
Igneous agents Change-in re-establish Metamorphic
Sedimentary loss eqm rocks
character equilibrium
Examples:-
Granite Gneiss
Basalt Laterite/Schist
Limestone Marble
Slate
Mudstone
Siliceous sand Quartzite
Igneous agents Change-in re-establish Metamorphic
Sedimentary loss eqm rocks
character equilibrium
Examples:-
Granite Gneiss (High compressive strength)
Basalt
Laterite/Schist
Limestone Marble (Specific gravity = 2.72)
Slate
Mudstone
Siliceous sand Quartzite
Types of Metamorphism
Can easily split along Can’t split in desired Split easily along
planes of cleavage layers. planes of foliation.
11
Seasoning Upto 6-12 months
< 13 = not
12 Toughness index tough
- Impact test 13-19 = Moderate
Varieties of stones
Granite
• Igneous rock – Plutonic
• Composed of quartz + feldspar + Silica
• Available in colors: Grey, Green, Brown, Pink, Red
• Hard, durable, high resistance to weathering
• Specific gravity = 2.7
• Compressive strength = 700 – 1300 N/mm2.
• Uses: Ornamental works, flooring, walls etc
Varieties of stones
Trap rock
• Sedimentary rock
• Fine/coarse grained
• Specific gravity = 2.65 – 2.95
• Compressive strength = 650 N/mm2.
• Used for Ashlar works
Varieties of stones
Laterite
• Sedimentary rock
• Hard and durable
• Rich in Fe and Al
• Colour : Rusty red
(high iron oxide content)
Types of dressing
1. Quarry dressing
2. Site dressing
Deterioration of stones
1. Alternate wetness and drying
2. Frost
3. Impurities in atmosphere
4. Living organisms
5. Movement of chemicals
6. Rain water
7. Temperature variations
8. Vegetable growth
9. Wind
Clay Products
2 Clay Products
Ceramics Potter’s art
(‘Keramos’-Greek) Articles made by the potter
Tiles
Clay
products
Stoneware
Terra-cotta
Earthenware
Bricks
Obtained by moulding clay
in rectangular blocks
of uniform size
and then by drying and
burning.
Composition of brick earth:
Chief constituent
1 Alumina 20-30 % imparts
plasticity
Excess –
shrinkage and
warping
Prevent cracking, shrinking & warping
2 Silica 50-60 % Imparts uniform shape to bricks
Durability of bricks depends mainly
Prevents shrinkage
3 Lime < 5% Excess – lime melts and shape losts
Helps lime to fuse sand
4 Iron Oxide 5-6 % Imparts red colour
Excess – blackish, less
- yellowish
Imparts yellow tint
Harmful ingredients in brick earth
Iron pyrites
Pebbles
Natural
3. Drying
Artificial
Clamp
4. Burning burning
Kiln burning
Pug mil
2. Moulding
• It is cut to bricks by
steel
wires fixed into frames.
• Rectangular boxes of wood or steel
Classification:
1. Plastic clay machines
2. Dry clay machines
3. Drying
Intermittent Continuous
kilns kilns
1. Load
2. Fire
3. Cool
4. Unload
Clamp burning
• Trapezoidal shape
• End raised at 150 from ground level
• Brick wall in mud at short end
• Alternate layers of raw bricks and fuels.
• Fuels - grass, cow dung, wood
• Air circulation spaces provided
• Total height of clamp = 3-4 m
Disadvantages
• Bricks are not of required shape
• It is very slow process
• It is not possible to regulate fire in a clamp
• Quality of brick is not uniform
Kiln burning
Kiln burning • A kiln is a large oven to burn bricks
• 2-3 brick row
• Trolleys used for movement of bricks
Intermittent kilns
• Loading of kiln with raw bricks
• Each door is built up with dry bricks and
are covered with mud or clay
• Suitable for burning of structural clay tiles, terra cota close control of
heat
Continous kilns
Tiles
Clay
products
Stoneware
Terra-cotta
Earthenware
Tiles
Thin slabs of bricks which are burnt in kilns
Thinner than bricks ⸫ handle carefully
Bricks may be glazed or unglazed
They are incombustible in
nature Tiles are unaffected
under light
Manufacture of tiles
Sialkot kiln
4 Burning
Characteristics of a good tile
1 Free from cracks and bends
2 Regular in shape and size
3 Well burnt, hard and durable
4 Gives clear ringing sound when struck with hand
5 Pan tiles
Pot
tiles
2. Floor tiles 3. Wall tiles 4. Drain tiles
Used for flooring works Interior and exterior Drain water through it
Flat in shape walls
Tiles with holes
Made of ceramic, stone, Decoration purpose
Porous
or glass
Toilets
Available in various Avoids flooding of
textures water
5. Partition tiles 6. Pavement tiles
Used for partition of spaces in a room Also called as inter-locks
Thinner partitions Used as pavements
Sub divide areas into room Provision for drainage
1. Ceramic tiles
Clay, sand, and other natural substances.
Commonly used in residential buildings
Mainly used in interior walls and floors
Ceramic coating
Clay
2. Porcelain tiles
A type of ceramic tiles
Clay grains used are finer than ceramic tiles
Mainly used in interior walls and floors
Fired at higher temperature than ceramic
tiles
Denser, less porous and more resistant to
moisture and stains than ceramic tiles
Suitable for both indoor and outdoor works
Harder, but low water absorption
Vitrified tiles Glazed tiles
Ceramic tile with very low porosity Liquid glass coating of
thickness 0.1 - 0.2
Clay + quartz + feldspar + silica mm
Alternative to marble and granite
Stain resistant
flooring
Easy to clean
Ceramic material in full
thickness Fade resistance
Ceramic coating
3 Drying
Muffle furnace
4 Burning
Varieties of terra-cotta
1. Porous terra-cotta
Wood powder/saw dust added
Fire and sound proof
• Uses:
Ordinary buildings
Massive monuments
Palaces
Forts
84
Sources of lime
1. Limestone hills
2. Seashells
3. Corals
4. Kankar (Below ground level)
5. Beds of old rivers
Important technical terms
1. Calcination
Heating to redness in presence of air
2. Hydraulicity
Ability to set in presence of water and in absence of air
3. Lime
Calcination
CaCO3 CaO + CO2
(Limestone) (Lime)
5. Setting
Process of hardening of lime after it has been converted
into paste form.
Manufacture of fat lime
Classification
Based on clay content BIS Classification
Types/sources of Sand
• Manufactured sand
• Alternative to river sand
• Cost of construction is less
• Low water absorption
• Manufactured by crushing of rocks
• In reality, better than river sand.
Coarse aggregates
• Size > 4.75 mm
• Major contribution to strength in concrete
• Influences workability & degree of compaction of concrete
• Materials generally used are :
1. Gravel
2. Crushed stone
3. Slag
4. Recycled concrete
5. Geo-synthetic aggregates
Requirements of good coarse aggregates
Concrete
• Composite mixture
• Easily mouldable
• Cement + Sand + Coarse aggregate + water
• Used in beams, columns, slabs, footings, stairs, etc
Functions of sand in mortar
1. Void filler
2. Bulking – Sand bulks volume of mortar increases Thus cost reduced.
2 Crushing strength
3 Tensile strength
1. Adhesiveness to building units
1. Place two bricks at right angles
2. Weight batching
• Accurate and uniform proportioning
PCC and RCC
Structural concrete
Creep of concrete
Thermal expansion of
concrete
Characteristics of reinforcement
Unit weight = 7850 kg/m3
Modulus of Elasticity, E = 2 x 105 N/mm2
Poisson ratio, 𝝁 = 𝟎. 𝟑
Should bond well with concrete
Should have good strength
Should have good
ductility
Should have good
resistance against
Concrete grade and mix ratio
Mix Mix ratio Nature of work
M 5.0 1:5:10 Mass concrete for heavy walls,
footings, etc
M 7.5 1:4:8 Mass concrete – foundations of
less importance
M 10 1:3:6 Mass concrete – foundations of
less importance
M 15 1:2:4 General RCC works (Slab, beam,
column, etc)
M 20 1:1.5:3 Water retaining structures, piles,
and general RCC works
M 25 1:1:2 Heavy loaded RCC structure –
long span slabs, beams, etc
Workability
• 3 cubes – 15 X 15 X 15 cm
• Mould removal – after 1 day
• Curing – 3, 7, 28 days
• Tested using UTM/CTM
Compression test - Cylinder
Flexural strength test
Split tensile strength test
Chemical admixtures
Chemicals added to concrete before or
during mixing of concrete to modify some
specific property of fresh or hardened
concrete.
Eg:-
1. Plasticizer
2. Superplasticizer
3. Accelerators
4. Retarders
5. Air entraining admixtures
6. Water-reducers
Plasticizers and super plasticizers
• A type of water reducing admixture
• Also called as High range water reducer
• Increased fluidity : flowing, self levelling, etc
• Reduced water cement ratio: High early strength
• A type of admixture
• Increase rate of hydration of cement
• Reduce setting time
• Increase rate of strength development
• Eg:- Na2SO4, NaCl, K2SO4, CaCl2
Retarders
Converted timber Timber sawn & cut into suitable commercial sizes
Classification of trees
1. Micro structure
Timber studied under microscope
2. Macro structure
Timber studied with naked eye
Micro structure
Timber consists of living and dead cells
Living cells – membrane, protoplasm, sap, core
1. Conductive cells
Transfer nutrients from roots to various parts of tree
2. Mechanical cells
Tightly interconnects cells and imparts strength to tree
3. Storage cells
Extra nutrients are stored
Macro structure
Pith (core/medulla)
Innermost central portion
Supply nutrients at young age
Heart wood
Inner annular rings surrounding pith
Usually dark in colour
Used for engineering purposes
2. Diagonal grain
Due to improper sawing of timber
Should cut parallel to layers/fibers
Don’t cross fibers while cutting
3. Torn grain
When heavy equipments falls on a finished surface,
depressions are formed.
Not affect strength, but affect appearence
4. Wane
Due to improper sawing of timber
2. Defects due to fungus
Fungus attacks timber if
2. Sap stain
Sap wood losses its colour due to fungus attack.
3. Dry rot
Certain fungus attack timber and convert it into powder form
4. Wet rot
Some fungus causes chemical decomposition of wood
that convert timber into greyish brown powder.
5. Brown rot
Rot means decay/disease of timber
Some fungus attacks cellulose White colour losses.
Thus brown colour of lignin dominates and wood seen
as brown colour.
6. White rot
Some fungus attacks lignin Brown colour losses.
Thus white colour of cellulose dominates and wood seen
as white colour.
7. Heart rot
Formed when branches are cut
Heart wood is exposed to attacks of atmospheric agents
Fungus develops holes in timber
Tree becomes weak; it gives us hollow sound when
stuck with a hammer.
3. Defects due to natural forces
1. Burls
Also known as excrescences
When tree gets shock/injury in its young age
Due to such injury, growth of tree becomes completely
upset and irregular projections appear on the body of
timber.
2. Callus
Soft tissue or skin which covers the wound of a tree
3. Chemical stain
Wood sometimes discoloured by chemical actions.
4. Coase grain
If a tree grows rapidly, annual rings are widened.
Have less strength
5. Dead wood
Timber obtained from dead standing trees
6. Druxiness
White decayed spots concealed by healthy wood
7. Foxiness
Red or yellow tinge in wood
Due to
(i) Bad ventilation
(ii) Over maturity
8. Knot
Bases of cut-off branches of a tree
Continuity of wood fibre is lost due to knots Weak
Dark and strong (even saw breaks)
Losses alignment of fibers
9. Rind galls
Rind means bark; gall means abnormal growth
Develops at points from where branches are
improperly cut-off.
Nutrients get still supplied at that points
Fibers gets cutted
10. Shakes
a) Cup shakes
Cracks formed in annual ring direction
Curved cracks
b) Ring shakes
Heart shake
Radial shake
Star shake
2. Marine borers
Salty waters make holes in timber for shelter
3. Termites
White ants
5. Defects due to seasoning
1. Check
Crack which seperates fibers of wood
Does not extend from one end to other
2. Split
When a crack extends from one end to other
3. Cup
Curvature formed in transverse direction
4. Bow
Curvature formed in direction of length of timber
5. Twist
When a piece of timber get spirally distorted along
its length
6. Warp
When a piece of timber has twisted out of shape
7. Collapse
Due to uneven shrinkage, wood sometimes
flattens during drying.
1. Check
2. Split
8. Case hardening 3. Cup
4. Bow
5. Twist
Exposed surface of timber dries rapidly 6. Warp
Under Compression 7. Collapse
8. Case hardening
Interior surface not completely dried 9.Radial shake
10.Honey combing
Under tension
9. Radial shake
Brushing
Spraying
Injectin
g under
pressure
Dipping and stepping
Charring
Hot and cold open
Types of preservatives for timber
Veneer
Plywood
Fibreboard
Impreg timber
Compreg
timber
1. Veneer
1. Ceilings
2. Doors
3. Furniture
4. Partitions
5. Paneling walls
6. Formworks of concrete
3. Fiberboard (Pressed/reconstructed wood)
Rigid boards
Thickness = 3 mm to 12 mm
Not able to take loads
Used for:
1. Interior decorations
2. Doors
3. Partitions
4. Panel works
Impreg and compreg timber
4. Impreg timber
Timber partly/fully covered with resins
Eg: Phenol formaldehyde
Veneers immersed in resins and heated
Trade names: Sunmica, formica, Sungloss
Not affected by moisture, weather, acids,
etc Low contraction and expansion
Glazing appearence
5. Compreg timber
Same as impreg timber, but cured under
pressure Heat + Pressure
More strength and durability – good quality
Metals
Ferrous Non-ferrous
metals
metals
1. Wrought iron 1. Aluminum
2. Cast iron 2. Copper
3. Mild steel 3. Lead
4. Special steels 4. Zinc
a. High carbon steel 5. Titanium
b. High tensile steel 6. Cobalt
c. Stainless steel
7. Nickel
Iron ores
Uses of Aluminum
For making parts of aeroplane
Utensils
Corrugated roofing sheets
Structural members
Electric wires
Window frames
2. Copper
Ores:
Cuprite
Copper glance
Copper pyrites
Malachite
Azarite
Cannot welded
It has a peculiar red colour
Good conductor of heat and electricity
Specific gravity = 8.90
Malleable, ductile and soft
Not attacked by water at any
temperature, But attacked by steam at
white heat.
Uses of Copper
Wires and electric cables
Household utensils
Electroplating
3. Lead
Ore: Galena
Specific gravity = 11.36
It can be cut with
knife
It is lustrous metal
with bluish grey colour
It is soft
Uses: Shot puts, bullets, base in paints,
4. Zinc