• Title/Summary/Keyword: Pervious concrete

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Porous concrete with optimum fine aggregate and fibre for improved strength

  • Karanth, Savithri S.;Kumar, U. Lohith;Danigond, Naveen
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • v.8 no.4
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    • pp.305-309
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    • 2019
  • Pervious concrete pavements are the need of the day to avoid urban flooding and to facilitate ground water recharge. However, the strength of pervious or porous concrete is considerably less compared to conventional concrete. In this experimental investigation, an effort is made to improve the strength of pervious concrete by adopting fibres and a small amount of fine aggregate. A porous concrete with cement to aggregate ratio of 1:5 and a water-powder ratio of 0.4 is adopted. 30% of the cement is replaced by cementitious material ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS) for better strength and workability. Recron fibres at a dosage of 0.5, 1.0 and 1.5% by weight of cement were included to improve the impact strength. Since concrete pavements are subjected to impact loads, the impact strength was also calculated by "Drop ball method" in addition to compressive strength. The effect of fine aggregate and recron fibres on workability, porosity, compressive and impact strength was studied. The investigations have shown that 20% inclusion of fine aggregate and 1.5% recron fibres by weight of cement give better strength with an acceptable range of porosity.

Evaluation of Mechanical Properties of Porous and Pervious Light-weight Concrete by Mixing Proportion (다공성, 투수성 경량콘크리트의 배합비에 따른 물리적 특성 평가)

  • Ahn, Hwi-Soon;Shin, Hyun-Oh;SeonWoo, Yoon-Ho;Song, Si-Bum;Jung, Kwang-Sik;Yoon, Young-Soo
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2010.05a
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    • pp.305-306
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    • 2010
  • Recently, concrete have been used not only for structural purpose but also for various other purposes. The goal of this research is to develop porous and pervious light-weight concrete in order to apply to filters, which primarily treats rain water. Because Porous and pervious light-weight concrete is discontinuum with large amount of porosity, its physical characteristic is completely different from that of ordinary concrete. The basic properties such as the change in porosity rate depending on mixing proportion and the mechanical characteristics of porous and pervious light-weight concrete were experimentally evaluated.

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Application of polymer, silica-fume and crushed rubber in the production of Pervious concrete

  • Li, Diyuan;Toghroli, Ali;Shariati, Mahdi;Sajedi, Fathollah;Bui, Dieu Tien;Kianmehr, Peiman;Mohamad, Edy Tonnizam;Khorami, Majid
    • Smart Structures and Systems
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.207-214
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    • 2019
  • Achieving a pervious concrete (PC) with appropriate physical and mechanical properties used in pavement have been strongly investigated through the use of different materials specifically from the global waste materials of the populated areas. Discarded tires and the rubber tire particles have been currently manufactured as the recycled waste materials. In the current study, the combination of polymer, silica fume and rubber aggregates from rubber tire particles have been used to obtain an optimized PC resulting that the PC with silica fume, polymer and rubber aggregate replacement to mineral aggregate has greater compressive and flexural strength. The related flexural and compressive strength of the produced PC has been increased 31% and 18% compared to the mineral PC concrete, also, the impact resistance has been progressed 8% compared to the mineral aggregate PC and the permeability with Open Graded Fraction Course standard (OGFC). While the manufactured PC has significantly reduced the elasticity modulus of usual pervious concrete, the impact resistance has been remarkably improved.

Fundamental Study on Pervious Concrete Materials for Airport Pavement Cement Treated Base Course (공항포장 시멘트안정처리기층에 적용하기 위한 투수콘크리트 개발에 관한 기초연구)

  • Kim, Seung Won;Oh, Ji Hyeon;Jang, Bong Jin;Ju, Min Kwan;Kim, In Tai;Park, Cheol Woo
    • International Journal of Highway Engineering
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.65-73
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    • 2013
  • PURPOSES : As a research to develop a cement treated base course for an airport pavement which can enhance its drainage, this paper investigated the strength, infiltration performance and durability of the pervious concrete with respect to maximum coarse aggregate sizes and compaction methods. METHODS : This study measured compressive strength, infiltration rate, continuous porosity and freeze-thaw resistance of pervious concrete specimens, which were fabricated with five different compaction methods and different maximum aggregate sizes. In addition, in order to reduce the usage of Portland cement content and to enhance environment-friendliness, a portion of the cement was replaced with Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag (GGBS). RESULTS: Compressive strength requirement, 5 MPa at 7 days, was met for all applied compaction methods and aggregate sizes, except for the case of self-compaction. Infiltration rate became increased as the size of aggregate increased. The measured continuous porosities varied with the different compaction methods but the variation was not significant. When GGBS was incorporated, the strength requirement was successfully satisfied and the resistance to freezing-thawing was also superior to the required limit. CONCLUSIONS: The infiltration rate increased as the maximum size of aggregate increased but considering construct ability and supply of course aggregate, its size is recommended to be 25mm. With the suggested mix proportions, the developed pervious concrete is expected to successfully meet requirements for strength, drainage and durability for cement treated base or subbase course of an airport pavement.

Influence of binder, aggregate and compaction techniques on the properties of single-sized pervious concrete

  • Juradin, Sandra;Ostojic-Skomrlj, Nives;Brnas, Ivan;Prolic, Marina
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • v.10 no.3
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    • pp.211-220
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    • 2020
  • In this paper, 18 single-sized pervious concrete mixtures were tested. The mixtures were prepared by altering: the amount and type of binder, type of aggregate, and the method of compaction. Concrete was compacted in layers in one of five different consolidation techniques: with standard tamping rod, wooden lath, concrete cylinder, or vibration of 12 and 40 s. Tests carried out on the specimens were: slump, density, porosity, coefficients of permeability, compressive strength and splitting strength. The relationships between porosity-density and porosity-strength were established. Two mixtures were selected for the preparation of test slabs on different subgrades and their permeability was tested according to ASTM C 1701-09 Standard. By comparing laboratory and field tests of permeability, it was concluded that the subgrade affects the test results. Measurements on the test slabs were repeated after 1 and 2 years of installation.

Effect of porosity on frost resistance of Portland cement pervious concrete

  • Zhang, Wuman;Li, Honghe;Zhang, Yingchen
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.363-373
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    • 2018
  • Portland cement pervious concrete (PCPC) is an effective pavement material to solve or reduce the urban waterlogging problems. The Mechanical properties, the permeability, the abrasion resistance and the frost resistance of PCPC without fine aggregate were investigated. The increase of porosity was achieved by fixing the dosage of coarse aggregate and reducing the amount of cement paste. The results show that the compressive strength and the flexural strength of PCPC decrease with the increase of porosity. The permeability coefficient and the wear loss of PCPC increase with the increase of the porosity. The compressive strength and the flexural strength of PCPC subjected to 25 freeze-thaw cycles are reduced by 13.7%-17.8% and 10.6%-18.3%, respectively. For PCPC subjected to the same freeze-thaw cycles, the mass loss firstly increases and then decreases with the increase of the porosity. The relative dynamic modulus elasticity decreases with the increase of freeze-thaw cycles. And the lower the PCPC porosity is, the more obvious the dynamic modulus elasticity decreases.

Optimizing the mix design of pervious concrete based on properties and unit cost

  • Taheri, Bahram M.;Ramezanianpour, Amir M.
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.285-298
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    • 2021
  • This study focused on experimental evaluation of mechanical properties of pervious concrete mixtures with the aim of achieving higher values of strength while considering the associated costs. The effectiveness of key parameters, including cement content, water to cement ratio (W/C), aggregate to cement ratio (A/C), and sand replacement was statistically analyzed using paired-samples t-test, Taguchi method and one-way ANOVA. Taguchi analysis determined that in general, the role of W/C was more significant in increasing strength, both compressive and flexural, than cement content and A/C. It was found that increase in replacing percent of coarse aggregate with sand could undermine specimens to percolate water, though one-way ANOVA analysis determined statistically significant increases in values of strength of mixtures. Cost analysis revealed that higher strengths did not necessarily correspond to higher costs; in addition, increasing the cement content was not an appropriate scenario to optimize both strength and cost. In order to obtain the optimal values, response surface method (RSM) was carried out. RSM optimization helped to find out that W/C of 0.40, A/C of 4.0, cement content of about 330 kg/m3 and replacing about 12% of coarse aggregate with sand could result in the best values for strength and cost while maintaining adequate permeability.

Effect of using recycled coarse aggregate and recycled asphalt pavement on the properties of pervious concrete

  • Shatarat, Nasim K.;Katkhuda, Hasan N.;Hyari, Khaled H.;Asi, Ibrahim
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.67 no.3
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    • pp.283-290
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    • 2018
  • This paper presents the results of a study that investigated the influence of using recycled coarse aggregate (RCA) and recycled asphalt pavement (RAP) on the properties of pervious concrete (PC). The natural aggregate (NA) was replaced by RCA and RAP in the PC with replacement levels of 0%, 20%, 40%, 60% and 80% by the total weight of NA, respectively. In addition to incorporating RAP and RCA in the same mixes with replacement levels of: (1) 20% RAP and 80% RCA; (2) 60% RAP and 40% RCA; and (3) 80% RAP and 20% RCA. Water permeability, thermal conductivity, density, porosity, void content, and compressive, splitting tensile and flexural strengths were studied in this paper. The results showed that using RCA, RAP, and (RAP-RCA) enhanced the properties of PC in general and improved the mechanical properties significantly in particular. The optimum mix was reported to be the 60% RAP and 40% RCA. Accordingly, the RAP has the potential to be used in PC in order to reduce the negative impact of RAP on the human health and environment.

Evaluation of Absorbent-Pervious Alkali-Activated Block Using Recycled Aggregate (순환골재를 이용한 보투수성 알칼리 결합재 블록의 성능평가)

  • Park, Kwang-Min;Kim, Hyung-Suk;Cho, Young-Keun
    • Journal of the Korean Recycled Construction Resources Institute
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    • v.5 no.2
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    • pp.160-167
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    • 2017
  • The purpose of this study is to identify the possibility of developing the 100% Recycled-resources Absorbent-Pervious Alkali-activated Blocks using both the alkalli-binder and the recycled aggregate. In addition, It established a test method such as Void ratio, compressive strength, coefficient permeability, absorption, and evaporation. As a result, an alkali-activated using recycled aggregate block was able to manufacture an 24 MPa class absorbent-pervious blocks with a liquid type sodium silicate and early high temperature curing. In this case, water-holding capacity, absorption and relative absorption were more effective than the natural aggregates. In conclusion, Absorbent-pervious alkali-activated Block Using recycled aggregate has a surface temperature reducing effect of approximately 10 % compared to ordinary concrete block.

The Effect of Pervious Pavement on Reducing the Surface Runoff (투수성 포장재의 우수 표면유출 저감 효과)

  • Lee, Chun-Seok;Ryu, Nam-Hyung;Han, Seung-Ho
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Environmental Restoration Technology
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    • v.11 no.6
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    • pp.26-37
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    • 2008
  • The purpose of the study was to evaluate the effect of pervious pavements on reducing the surface runoff caused by rainfall. The surface runoff from twelve steel experimental beds with different pavement had been recorded every minute from May to September 2008, by the measuring system of tipping buckets(0.1mm/count) and data aquisition systems(National Instrument's Labview and DAQ boards & Autonics PR12-4). The dimension of the experimental bed was $1.5m(W){\times}2.0m(L){\times}0.6m(D)$ and eleven different kinds of vegetational(grass, grass+cubic stone, grass+hole brick), modular(brick, cubic stone, small cubic stone, wood block, interlocking block, clay brick, granular clay brick) and granular(naked soil, gravel) paving materials and concrete were applied for the comparison. Six rain events with depth over 30mm were selected and compared. The maximum depth of the rainfall selected was 137.5mm for 28 hours, and the minimum 30mm for 5 hours. The maximum rainfall per hour was 23mm/hr and the minimum 11.4mm/hr. The major findings were as follows; 1. All pervious pavement applied reduced over 75% of the surface runoff compared with concrete pavement. The grassy and porous pavements were relatively efficient in reducing surface runoff. 2. The grass was the more efficient as intercepting average 69.5mm of initial surface runoff, and maximum 77.8mm at the condition of 13.5mm/hr rainfall. The next was gravel intercepting maximum 65.5mm at the condition of 13.5mm/hr and the 40.9mm at 19.1mm/hr, average 55.7mm. 3. The modular pavements common in urban area were not good in intercepting the runoff except the 'clay granular brick' compared with others. The 'clay granular brick' showed relatively efficient intercepting average 14.1mm, which was the bigger amount than the 'grass+hole brick'. 4. The 'naked soil' were more effective than the 'concrete', 'brick', and 'interlocking block' in reducing the surface runoff, but less efficient than other materials. The capacity of the 'naked soil' to intercept the initial rainfall was similar to the 'brick'. As summary, the more grassy and porous pavement shows more effective in reducing surface runoffs.