• Title/Summary/Keyword: Silica-fume

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A Study of the Basic Properties of Lightweight Aggregate Concrete for Offshore Structures Application (해양구조물 적용을 위한 경량골재콘크리트의 기초물성에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Myung-Sik;Jang, Hee-Suk;Kim, Chung-Ho;Baek, Dong-Il
    • Journal of Ocean Engineering and Technology
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.73-79
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    • 2011
  • The various properties of concrete have been required, as civil engineering structures are getting larger and complicated. Therefore, the high performance of concrete, such as high strength, high fluidity, and low hydration heat, has been investigated largely. In this study, the properties of lightweight concrete-reducing self-weight of structure member have been studied in order to check the applicability of lightweight aggregate concrete to structural material. The experiments on compressive strength, splitting tensile strength, unit weight, and modulus of elasticity have been conducted with varying PLC, LWCI, LWCII, LWCII-SF5, LWCII-SF15 to check the basic properties. The compressive strength of 21MPa was obtained easily by using lightweight aggregate concrete and the addition of silica fume to increase the compressive strength slightly. To use lightweight aggregate concrete for civil engineering structures, systematic and rigorous studies are necessary.

Optimum Mix Proportion of Latex Modified Repair Mortar for Agricultural Concrete Structures (농업용 콘크리트 구조물을 위한 라텍스 개질 보수용 모르타르의 적정 배합비 도출)

  • Won, Jong-Pil;Lee, Jae-Young;Park, Chan-Gi;Park, Seong-Gi
    • Journal of The Korean Society of Agricultural Engineers
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    • v.49 no.2
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    • pp.37-46
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    • 2007
  • The service life of agricultural concrete structures is designed in about 30 to 100 years, but actual service lift is estimated in an average 18 years. Therefore, as the service life of the agricultural concrete structures increases, necessity of repair by aging from various environment condition exposure increases. This study was to determinate the optimum mix proportion of latex modified repair mortar and to improve the durability performance of agricultural concrete structures. The physical and mechanical tests of latex modified repair mortar were performed. Tests of flow, compressive strength, flexural strength and bond strength tests were conducted. Test results show that the optimum nex proportion of latex modified repair mortar, when used in 5% latex volume fraction (weight of cement), 1.5% antifoaming agent (weight of latex), 0.2% PVA fiber volume fraction, 1:2 (binder-sand ratio), 10% silica fume replacement ratio (weight of cement), could result in best performance for the repair of agricultural concrete structures.

A Study on Shear-Fatigue Behavior of Reinforced Concrete Beams using High Strength Concrete (고강도 콘크리트를 사용한 철근콘크리트 보의 전단피로거동에 관한 연구)

  • 곽계환;박종건
    • Journal of the Korea Concrete Institute
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    • v.11 no.5
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    • pp.119-130
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    • 1999
  • Recently, as the building structure has been larger, higher, longer and more specialized, the demand of material with high-strength concrete for building has been increasing. In this research, silica-fume was used as an admixture in order to get a high-strength concrete. From the test result, High-strength concrete with cylinder strength of 1,200kgf/$\textrm{cm}^2$ in 28-days was produced and tested. The static test was carried out to measure the ultimate load, the initial load of flexural and diagonal cracking, crack patterns and fracture modes. The load versus strain and load versus deflection relations were obtained from the static test. The relation of cycle loading to deflections on the mid-span, the crack propagation and the modes of failure according to cycle number, fatigue life and S-N curve were observed through the fatigue test. Based on the fatigue test results, high-strength reinforced concrete beams failed to 57~66 percent of the static ultimate strength. Fatigue strength about two million cycles from S-N curves was certified by 60 percent of static ultimate strength.

Phenomenological Model to Re-proportion the Ambient Cured Geopolymer Compressed Blocks

  • Radhakrishna, Radhakrishna;Madhava, Tirupati Venu;Manjunath, G.S.;Venugopal, K.
    • International Journal of Concrete Structures and Materials
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    • v.7 no.3
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    • pp.193-202
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    • 2013
  • Geopolymer mortar compressed blocks were prepared using fly ash, ground granulated blast furnace slag, silica fume and metakaolin as binders and sand/quarry dust/pond ash as fine aggregate. Alkaline solution was used to activate the source materials for synthesizing the geopolymer mortar. Fresh mortar was used to obtain the compressed blocks. The strength development with reference to different parameters was studied. The different parameters considered were fineness of fly ash, binder components, type of fine aggregate, molarity of alkaline solution, age of specimen, fluid-to-binder ratio, binder-to-aggregate ratio, degree of saturation, etc. The compressed blocks were tested for compression at different ages. It was observed that some of the blocks attained considerable strength within 24 h under ambient conditions. The cardinal aim was to analyze the experimental data generated to formulate a phenomenological model to arrive at the combinations of the ingredients to produce geopolymer blocks to meet the strength development desired at the specified age. The strength data was analyzed within the framework of generalized Abrams' law. It was interesting to note that the law was applicable to the analysis of strength development of partially saturated compressed blocks when the degree of saturation was maintained constant. The validity of phenomenological model was examined with an independent set of experimental data. The blocks can replace the traditional masonry blocks with many advantages.

Predicting concrete properties using neural networks (NN) with principal component analysis (PCA) technique

  • Boukhatem, B.;Kenai, S.;Hamou, A.T.;Ziou, Dj.;Ghrici, M.
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.10 no.6
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    • pp.557-573
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    • 2012
  • This paper discusses the combined application of two different techniques, Neural Networks (NN) and Principal Component Analysis (PCA), for improved prediction of concrete properties. The combination of these approaches allowed the development of six neural networks models for predicting slump and compressive strength of concrete with mineral additives such as blast furnace slag, fly ash and silica fume. The Back-Propagation Multi-Layer Perceptron (BPMLP) with Bayesian regularization was used in all these models. They are produced to implement the complex nonlinear relationship between the inputs and the output of the network. They are also established through the incorporation of a huge experimental database on concrete organized in the form Mix-Property. Thus, the data comprising the concrete mixtures are much correlated to each others. The PCA is proposed for the compression and the elimination of the correlation between these data. After applying the PCA, the uncorrelated data were used to train the six models. The predictive results of these models were compared with the actual experimental trials. The results showed that the elimination of the correlation between the input parameters using PCA improved the predictive generalisation performance models with smaller architectures and dimensionality reduction. This study showed also that using the developed models for numerical investigations on the parameters affecting the properties of concrete is promising.

Investigations on the tensile strength of high-performance fiber reinforced concrete using statistical methods

  • Ramadoss, P.;Nagamani, K.
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.3 no.6
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    • pp.389-400
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    • 2006
  • This paper presents the investigations towards developing a better understanding on the contribution of steel fibers on the tensile strength of high-performance fiber reinforced concrete (HPFRC). An extensive experimentation was carried out with w/cm ratios ranging from 0.25 to 0.40 and fiber content ranging from zero to 1.5 percent with an aspect ratio of 80. For 32 concrete mixes, flexural and splitting tensile strengths were determined at 28 days. The influence of fiber content in terms of fiber reinforcing index on the flexural and splitting tensile strengths of HPFRC is presented. Based on the test results, mathematical models were developed using statistical methods to predict 28-day flexural and splitting tensile strengths of HPFRC for a wide range of w/cm ratios. The expressions, being developed with strength ratios and not with absolute values of strengths and are applicable to wide range of w/cm ratio and different sizes/shapes of specimens. Relationship between flexural and splitting tensile strengths has been developed using regression analysis and absolute variation of strength values obtained was within 3.85 percent. To examine the validity of the proposed model, the experimental results of previous researchers were compared with the values predicted by the model.

Development of high-performance heavy density concrete using different aggregates for gamma-ray shielding

  • Ouda, Ahmed S.
    • Advances in materials Research
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    • v.3 no.2
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    • pp.61-75
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    • 2014
  • This study aimed to investigate the suitability of some concrete components for producing "high-performance heavy density concrete" using different types of aggregates that could enhances the shielding efficiency against ${\gamma}$-rays. 15 mixes were prepared using barite, magnetite, goethite and serpentine aggregates along with 10% silica fume, 20% fly ash and 30% blast furnace slag to total OPC content for each mix. The mixes were subjected to compressive strength at 7, 28 and 90 days. In some mixes, compressive strengths were also tested up to 90 days upon replacing sand with the fine portions of magnetite, barite and goethite. The mixes containing magnetite along with 10% SF reaches the highest compressive strength exceeding over M60 requirement by 14% after 28 days. Whereas, the compressive strength of concrete containing barite was very close to M60 and exceeds upon continuing for 90 days. Also, the compressive strength of high-performance concrete incorporating magnetite fine aggregate was significantly higher than that containing sand by 23%. On the other hand, concrete made with magnetite fine aggregate had higher physico-mechanical properties than that containing barite and goethite. High-performance concrete incorporating magnetite fine aggregate enhances the shielding efficiency against ${\gamma}$-rays.

Prediction of Strength of High-Strength Concrete by the Maturity Method (적산온도 방식을 이용한 고강도 콘크리트의 강도 예측)

  • 길배수;김태근;한장현;권영진;남재현;김무한
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1999.04a
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    • pp.259-264
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    • 1999
  • The aim of this study of to compare the development of compressive strength of high-strength concrete with maturity and investigate the applicability the strength prediction models. An experiment was attempted on the high-strength concrete mixes using portland cement replaced by silica fume of 10% by weight of cement, the water-binder ratios of mixes being 0.30 and 0.35, the curing temperatures being 30, 20, 10, 5$^{\circ}C$. Test results of mixes are statistically analyzed to infer the correlation coefficient between the maturity and the compressive strength of high-strength concrete. The constant of strength prediction equation were determined from test results, and the equation was adopted to predict the strength of slab(W80$\times$D100$\times$H20cm). The slab was cast in the laboratory from the same batch water-binder ratio of 0.30, and cores were cut from slab in order to estimate the actual strength. These values are used to compare with predicted value. The present study allows more realistic determination of early age compressive strength of high-strength concrete and can be efficiently used to control the quality in actual construction.

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Super Retarding Agent Affecting Setting Time of Concrete Using Mineral Admixture (혼화재를 사용한 콘크리트의 응결 시간에 미치는 초지연제의 영향)

  • Jeon Chung Keun;Kim Jong;Han Min Cheol;Shin Dong An;Oh Sean Kyo;Han Chean Goo
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2005.11a
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    • pp.643-646
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    • 2005
  • This paper reports the influence of super retarding agent(SRA) on the setting time of concrete incorporating mineral admixture including fly ash(FA), expansive additive(EA), silica fume(SF), blast furnace slag(BS) and blast furnace slag along with fly ash(BS+FA). An increase in SRA resulted in retarding the setting time of control concrete, while the use of mineral admixture led to a delay of setting time markedly, compared with that of control concrete under no SRA content. Meanwhile, An increase in SRA in concrete with mineral admixture exhibited comparable setting delay with control concrete. Furthermore, in case of the use of BS and SF, acceleration of setting time was observed with increase of SRA content. It is considered that proper dosage of SRA of concrete with SF and BS to secure similar setting delay with control concrete require rather larger than that of control concrete. Accordingly, For concrete with mineral admixture, in order to decide the proper dosage of SRA, application of correction factors is needed.

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An experimental Study on the Fundamental Properties of Lightweight Aggregate Concrete (경량골재 콘크리트의 기초물성에 관한 실험적 연구)

  • Baek, Dong-Il;Han, Hyun-Sun;Kim, Myung-Sik;Jang, Hee-Suk;Kim, Chung-Ho
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2009.05a
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    • pp.335-336
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    • 2009
  • In this study, the properties of lightweight concrete which is beneficial to cost and technique by reducing self weight of structure member was carried out basic research. The unit weight, compressive strength, splitting tensile strength test have been conducted with producting plain concrete, lightweight aggregate concrete type I and type II to check the basic properties. The compressive strength of 21MPa was obtained easily by using lightweight aggregate concrete and addition of silica fume increase the compressive strength slightly. To use lightweight aggregate concrete for civil engineering structure, systematic and rigorous studies are necessary.

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