• Title/Summary/Keyword: Fundamental mass Concrete

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Zero-Crack Construction on the Fundamental Mass Concrete Using Double Bubble Sheets and Applying Low Heat Mixture (저발열 배합 및 이중버블시트에 의한 기초 매트 매스 콘크리트의 무균열 시공)

  • Park, Yong-Kyu;Song, Sung-Bin;Baek, Byung-Hoon;Han, Cheon-Goo
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 2006.11a
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    • pp.5-8
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    • 2006
  • This study investigates the field application, Songdo the # 1st WORLD, on zero-crack construction of the fundamental mass concrete using double bubble sheets and applying low heat mixture. Experimental results of hydration heat analysis showed that crack modulus of concrete incorporating 20% of blast furnace slag cement was 1.0 in 120 hours, representing 50% probability of crack occurrence, thus requiring additional measures. As for a curing method, a specimen insulating two layers of vinyl chloride+double bubble sheets exhibited only $16.5^{\circ}C$ difference between upper and lower sections, and it also showed favorable workability as well as competitive economic side. Therefore it was determined to use it for curing method in this field. For the curing results of practical field, using 2 layers of vinyl chloride+double bubble sheets and applying low heat mixture on the fundamental mass concrete in 3A residential building exhibited less than only $15^{\circ}C$ difference between surface and center section of that in 5 days elapse and less than $20^{\circ}C$ in 9 days. This means that the crack by hydration heat was prevented, and other fields structures also resisted the plastic shrinkage by insulating the vinyl, sinking crack by second temping, even drying shrinkage by the mixture of low unit water. Therefore the crack on the placement has not been found so far, since the construction was started before 6 month.

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A Fundamental Study on the Control of Hydration Heat of Mass Concrete Using Setting Time Difference (응결시간차를 활용한 매스콘크리트의 수화열 조정에 관한 기초적 연구)

  • 배정렬;윤치환;김기철;한민철;오선교;한천구
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 2002.05a
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    • pp.41-45
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    • 2002
  • Placing lift is applied to place mass concrete in order to reduce thermal cracks by hydration heat. But they results in cold joint between placing lifts, which bring about the loss of strength, water tightness and undesirable appearance. Therefore, in this paper, mechanical and hydration heat of mass concrete using super retarding agent developed through previous study are investigated in order to reduce the hydration heat and place it without place lift. According to test results, placing lifts combined with normal concrete and concrete containing super retarding agent have positive effects on reducing hydration heat. Especially, the crack index by thermal stress of the concrete containing super retarding agent less than a quarter, compared to that of plain concrete without placing lifts, and less than a half, compared to that of plain concrete with placing lifts.

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Fundamental Properties of Low-Heat Concrete According to the Mixing Rate of Super Retarding Agent (초지연제 혼입률에 따른 저발열 콘크리트의 양생온도별 기초물성평가)

  • Park, Byoung-Joo;Choi, Yoon-Ho;Hyun, seung-Yong;Kim, Jong;Han, Min-Cheol;Han, Cheon-Goo
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 2020.06a
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    • pp.90-91
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    • 2020
  • As the construction site has become narrower recently, the importance of mass concrete is naturally being highlighted as skyscrapers become popular. However, it is not possible to install the entire volume per day if the mass concrete is installed due to the Remicon 8⦁5 system and the 52-hour workweek system. When the mass concrete base is divided into several days, cold joints occur because the consolidation of joints is not integrated due to different degree of hardening in the case of the previous layer and the next day. As a result, existing research has shown that if super retarding agent are mixed into Ready Mixed Concrete (hereinafter referred to as Remicon) using sugar as a raw material to delay the curing time of concrete, cold joints are inhibited and cracks are inhibited by reducing the initial hydration heat.

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A Fundamental Test of Temperature Crack Reduction Method Application by Setting Time Control of Large-Scaled Mat Foundation Mass Concrete (초대형 매트기초 매스 콘크리트의 응결시간조정에 의한 온도균열저감 공법적용의 기초적 실험)

  • Han, Cheon-Goo;Lee, Jae-Sam;Noh, Sang-Kyun
    • Journal of the Korea Institute of Building Construction
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    • v.9 no.3
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    • pp.95-101
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    • 2009
  • Constructing large-scale mat foundation mass concrete is increasing for the stability of building structure, because a lot of high rise building are being built in order to make full use of limited space. However, It is of increasing concerns that because limited placing equipments, available job-site and systems for mass concete placement in construction field do not allow to place great quantity of concrete at the same time in large scale mat foundation, consistency between placement lift can not be secured. And also, it is likely to crack due to stress caused by the difference of hydration heat generation time. To find out the solution against above problems, this study is to reconfirm the performance of normal concrete designed by mix proportion and super retarding concrete. The Fundamental test shows what happens if low heat proportioning and control method of setting time are applied at the job-site of newly constructed high rise building. The test result show that slump flow of concrete has been somewhat increased as the target retarding time gets longer, while the air content has been slightly decreased but this is no great difference from normal concrete. The setting time shows to be retarded as target retarding time gets longer, the range of retarding time increases. It is necessary to increase the amount of mix of super retarding agent in the proportion ration by setting curing temperature high since outdoor curing is about 6 hours faster than standard curing, which means the temperature of the concrete will be higher than the temperature of the surrounding environment, due to its high hydration heat when applying in a construction site. The compressive strength of super retarding concrete appears to be lower than normal concrete due to the retarding action in the early stage. However, as the time goes by, the compressive strength gets higher, and by the 28th day the strength becomes the same or higher than normal concrete.

An Experimental Study on the Fundamental and Adiabatic Temperature Rise Properties of High Volume Fly Ash Concrete (HVFA 콘크리트의 기초물성 및 단열온도상승 특성에 관한 실험적 연구)

  • Kim, Sung-Su;Choi, Se-Jin;Jeong, Yong;Lim, Keun-Chang;Park, Dae-Gyun;Cho, Yun-Gu
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2010.05a
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    • pp.309-310
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    • 2010
  • In this study we investigated the properties of the fundamental and adiabatic temperature rise of the concrete using high volume fly-ash. For this, the fly ash was used to replace cement at replacement ratio of 40% and 50% by mass, and then the slump, air content, bleeding, compressive strength and adiabatic temperature rise test of concrete were performed.

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Fundamental Properties and Adiabatic Temperature Rise of Concrete with the Combination of Mineral and Chemical Admixture (혼화재료의 조합사용에 따른 콘크리트의 기초물성 및 단열온도상승 특성)

  • Jeon Chung Keun;Kim Jong;Shin Dong-An;Yoon Gi-Won;Han Cheon Goo
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2005.05b
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    • pp.345-348
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    • 2005
  • This paper presents the result of adiabetic temperature rise and fundamental properties of concrete combining admixtures. According to results, difference of setting time with I5.5hours is observed between S-P and R-F30 mixture. Based on the adiabetic temperature rise test, 8$^{circ}C$of heat producted occurs between E-P and R-F30 mixture. is applied to estimate the temperature rising under adiabetic curing condition, which exhibits closer consistency with tested value. The function mentioned above can account for the effect of dormant period in hydration process at early stage on hydration heat production. It reveals that the consideration of placing layer based on the mixture adjustment(E-P mixture at top layer and R-F30 mixture at bottom layer) in mass concreting will contribute to reduce hydration heat as well as alleviate tensile stress discrepancy between placing layer.

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Parameters affecting the fundamental period of infilled RC frame structures

  • Asteris, Panagiotis G.;Repapis, Constantinos C.;Tsaris, Athanasios K.;Di Trapani, Fabio;Cavaleri, Liborio
    • Earthquakes and Structures
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    • v.9 no.5
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    • pp.999-1028
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    • 2015
  • Despite the fact that the fundamental period appears to be one of the most critical parameters for the seismic design of structures according to the modal superposition method, the so far available in the literature proposals for its estimation are often conflicting with each other making their use uncertain. Furthermore, the majority of these proposals do not take into account the presence of infills walls into the structure despite the fact that infill walls increase the stiffness and mass of structure leading to significant changes in the fundamental period numerical value. Toward this end, this paper presents a detailed and indepth analytical investigation on the parameters that affect the fundamental period of reinforce concrete structure. The calculated values of the fundamental period are compared against those obtained from the seismic code and equations proposed by various researchers in the literature. From the analysis of the results it has been found that the number of storeys, the span length, the stiffness of the infill wall panels, the location of the soft storeys and the soil type are crucial parameters that influence the fundamental period of RC buildings.

Fundamental periods of reinforced concrete building frames resting on sloping ground

  • De, Mithu;Sengupta, Piyali;Chakraborty, Subrata
    • Earthquakes and Structures
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.305-312
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    • 2018
  • Significant research efforts were undertaken to evaluate seismic performance of vertically irregular buildings on flat ground. However, there is scarcity of study on seismic performance of buildings on hill slopes. The present study attempts to investigate seismic behaviour of reinforced concrete irregular stepback building frames with different configurations on sloping ground. Based on extensive regression study of free vibration results of four hundred seventeen frames with varying ground slope, number of story and span number, a modification is proposed to the code based empirical fundamental time period estimation formula. The modification to the fundamental time period estimation formula is a simplified function of ground slope and a newly introduced equivalent height parameter to reflect the effect of stiffness and mass irregularity. The derived empirical formula is successfully validated with various combinations of slope and framing configurations of buildings. The correlation between the predicted and the actual time period obtained from the free vibration analysis results are in good agreement. The various statistical parameters e.g., the root mean square error, coefficient of determination, standard average error generally used for validation of such regression equations also ensure the prediction capability of the proposed empirical relation with reasonable accuracy.

Fundamental characteristics of high early strength low heat concrete according to mineral binder and high early strength material combination (광물질 결합재 및 조강형 재료 조합에 따른 조강형 저발열 콘크리트의 기초적 특성)

  • Kim, Kyoungmin;Son, Hojung
    • Journal of the Korean Crystal Growth and Crystal Technology
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    • v.24 no.1
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    • pp.27-32
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    • 2014
  • This study analyzed the fundamental characteristics of concrete according to a ternary system mixing in order to reduce hydration heat of mass concrete and to improve early age strength. The results are as follows. The fluidity of unconsolidated concrete satisfied the target scope regardless of the binder conditions. When the replacement ratio between FA and BS increased, the slump of low heat-A mix and low heat-B mix increased, and air content was not affected by the change of binders. As for setting time, low heat cement mix had the fastest regardless of W/B, and high early strength low heat mix achieved 6 hours' reduction compared with low heat-B mix at initial set, and 12 hours' reduction at the final set respectively. As for the simple hydration heat, the low mix peak temperature was the highest and low heat-B mix had the lowest temperature. And high early strength low heat mix was similar with that of low heat-B. The compressive strength of hardened concrete had similar strength scope in all mixes except for low heat-B mix at early ages, and had unexceptionally similar one without huge differences at long-term ages.

Vibration behavior of large span composite steel bar truss-reinforced concrete floor due to human activity

  • Cao, Liang;Li, Jiang;Zheng, Xing;Chen, Y. Frank
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.391-404
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    • 2020
  • Human-induced vibration could present a serious serviceability problem for large-span and/or lightweight floors using the high-strength material. This paper presents the results of heel-drop, jumping, and walking tests on a large-span composite steel rebar truss-reinforced concrete (CSBTRC) floor. The effects of human activities on the floor vibration behavior were investigated considering the parameters of peak acceleration, root-mean-square acceleration, maximum transient vibration value (MTVV), fundamental frequency, and damping ratio. The measured field test data were validated with the finite element and theoretical analysis results. A comprehensive comparison between the test results and current design codes was carried out. Based on the classical plate theory, a rational and simplified formula for determining the fundamental frequency for the CSBTRC floor is derived. Secondly, appropriate coefficients (βrp) correlating the MTVV with peak acceleration are suggested for heel-drop, jumping, and walking excitations. Lastly, the linear oscillator model (LOM) is adopted to establish the governing equations for the human-structure interaction (HSI). The dynamic characteristics of the LOM (sprung mass, equivalent stiffness, and equivalent damping ratio) are determined by comparing the theoretical and experimental acceleration responses. The HSI effect will increase the acceleration response.