• Title/Summary/Keyword: concrete shrinkage

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Influence of the Kinds and the Content of Expansive Additive on the Properties of Shrinkage of High Performance Concrete (고성능 콘크리트의 수축특성에 미치는 팽창재 종류 및 혼입률의 영향)

  • 배정렬;홍상희;고경택;김성욱;한천구
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2003.05a
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    • pp.349-354
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    • 2003
  • The objective of this paper is to investigate the length change of high performance concrete using expansive additives to reduce autogenous shrinkage and drying shrinkage. The kinds and the contents of expansive additives are varied. The expansive additives are used made from Japan(CSA type;JEA), China(CSA type;CEA) and Korea(gypsum type; KEA), respectively. According to results, remarkable variations of the properties at fresh concrete are not found with dosage of expansive additives. For compressive strength, it decreases about 6-10% with expansive additives of 10%. Autogenous shrinkage decreases about 32%, and drying shrinkage does about 35%, respectively, with expansive additives of 5%, and about 68% and about 55%, with expansive additives of 10%. Accordingly, expansive additives demand requires 10% by cement weight in order to reduce shrinkage of high performance concrete more effectively in the sphere of this study, and JEA shows the best shrinkage reducing performance among the tested expansive additives.

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A Fundamental Study on Physical Properties of Ultra High-Strength Concrete using Expansion Agent (팽창제를 사용한 초고강도 콘크리트의 물리적 특성에 관한 기초적 연구)

  • Park, Hyun;Han, Da-hee;Cho, Seung-Ho;Kim, Kwang-Ki;Kim, Woo-Jae;Jung, Sang-Jin
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 2008.11a
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    • pp.85-88
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    • 2008
  • As super-high-strength concrete uses a large amount of binder, there is an autogenous shrinkage strain larger than dry shrinkage and it degrades the quality of structures. Thus, we need a technology to minimize the shrinkage strain of super-high-strength concrete. Accordingly, the present study prepared super-high-strength concrete with design strength of over 100MPa and, using an embedded gauge, measured the shrinkage strain of free shrinkage specimens for super-high-strength concrete containing expansion agent. According to the results of this study, the expansion rate of concrete increased in the early stage due to the admixture of expansion agent, but the shrinkage rate went down with the lapse of time. The effect of the admixture of expansion agent on compressive strength appeared insignificant. Further research shall be made on different kinds of expansion agents and various mixture ratios for basic analysis to reduce autogenous shrinkage of super-high-strength concrete.

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A Basic Study on Autogenous Shrinkage and physical property of the Ultra-High-Strength Concrete (초고강도 콘크리트의 자기수축 및 물리적 특성에 관한 기초적 연구)

  • Park, Hyun;Yoon, Ki-Hyun;Cho, Seung-Ho;Kim, Kwang-Ki;Kim, Woo-Jae;Jung, Sang-Jin
    • Proceedings of the Korean Institute of Building Construction Conference
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    • 2009.05b
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    • pp.57-60
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    • 2009
  • In ultra-high-strength concrete, autogenous shrinkage is larger than dry shrinkage due to the consume of a large amount of cement and cementitous material, and this is a factor deteriorating the quality of structures. Thus, we need a new technology for minimizing the shrinkage strain for ultra-high-strength concrete. So, this paper have prepared super-high-strength concrete with specified mixing design strength of over 150MPa and have evaluated a method of reducing autogenous shrinkage by utilizing expander and shrinkage-reducing agent. According to the results of this study, with regard to the change in length by autogenous shrinkage, an expansion effect was observed until the age of seven days. The expansion effect was higher when the contents of the expander material were higher. In addition, ultra-high-strength concrete showed a shrinkage rate that slowed down with time, and the effect of the addition of expander material on compressive strength was insignificant. That is shown that required more database to be accumulated through experimental research for the shrinkage strain of members.

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Crack Characteristics of Soil Concrete Using Volcaniclastic and the Crack Repair Method (화산쇄설물을 사용한 소일콘크리트의 균열특성과 보수방법에 관한 연구)

  • Hong, Chong-Hyun
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.19 no.6
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    • pp.737-746
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    • 2010
  • Restraint to drying shrinkage is the most common cause of concrete cracking. In many applications, drying shrinkage cracks are inevitable. In this paper, the surface cracks of soil concrete caused by drying shrinkage were considered to become an one of concrete textures. So, laboratory shrinkage tests were conducted and the results were applied to the field applications. The study results were summarized as follows; First, the use of vinyl sheets and concrete polymers helped to control the concrete cracking. Second, crack propagation usually started at the interfaces of soil concrete slabs and the cracks grew to the inner slabs. Third, surface cracks of soil concrete slabs could be an one of good concrete textures

Shrinkage and Cracking Behavior of Ultra High Strength Concrete (초고강도 콘크리트의 수축 및 균열 특성에 관한 연구)

  • Kim Ji Won;Sohn Yu Shin;Lee Joo Ha;Yoon Young Soo
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2005.05b
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    • pp.9-12
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    • 2005
  • In this study, to investigate shrinkage and cracking behavior of 120MPa UHSC, free and restrained drying shrinkage test were performed. Three strength levels(50MPa, 80MPa, 120MPa) were used and the effect of mineral admixtures(fly ash, slag) on free and restrained shrinkage was investigated. From comparing the result of pin -penetration test with the result of ring test, Time-Zero was determined as initial set. Shrinkage test results show that autogenous shrinkage of UHSC was much higher than that of HSC, VHSC and fly ash delayed cracking age in UHSC by decreasing autogenous shrinkage. Additional free concrete rings(with restraint removed) were also tested to check the influence of the geometry of the specimens on free shrinkage. And then the relationship between free shrinkage and restrained shrinkage was investigated.

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Characteristics of Autogenous Shrinkage for Concrete Containing Blast-Furnace Slag (고로슬래그를 함유한 콘크리트의 자기수축 특성)

  • Lee Kwang-Myong;Kwon Ki-Heon;Lee Hoi-Keun;Lee Seung-Hoon;Kim Gyu-Yong
    • Journal of the Korea Concrete Institute
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    • v.16 no.5 s.83
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    • pp.621-626
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    • 2004
  • The use of blast-furnace slag (BFS) in making not only normal concrete but also high-performance concrete has several advantages with respect to workability, long-term strength and durability. However, slag concrete tends to show more shrinkage than normal concrete, especially autogenous shrinkage. High autogenous shrinkage would result in severe cracking if they are not controlled properly. Therefore, in order to minimize the shrinkage stress and to ensure the service life of concrete structures, the autogenous shrinkage behavior of concrete containing BFS should be understood. In this study, small prisms made of concrete with water-binder (cement+BFS) ratio (W/B) ranging from 0.27 to 0.42 and BFS replacement level of $0\%$, $30\%$, and $50\%$, were prepared to measure the autogenous shrinkage. Based on the test results, thereafter, material constants in autogenous shrinkage prediction model were determined. In particular, an effective autogenous shrinkage defined as the shrinkage that contributes to the stress development was introduced. Moreover, an estimation formula of the 28-day effective autogenous shrinkage was proposed by considering various W/B's. Test results showed that autogenous shrinkage increased with replacement level of BFS at the same W/B. Interestingly, the increase of autogenous shrinkage is dependent on the W/B at the same content of BFS; the lower W/B, the smaller increasing rate. In concluding, it is necessary to use the combination of other mineral admixtures such as shrinkage reducing admixture or to perform sufficient moisture curing on the construction site in order to reduce the autogenous shrinkage of BFS concrete.

Influence of Curing Condition on Drying Shrinkage of Concrete (초기 양생조건에 따른 콘크리트의 건조수축 특성)

  • 하재담;김태홍;유재상;이종열;배수호;권영호
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2003.05a
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    • pp.277-280
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    • 2003
  • Material, mix proportion, curing condition, temperature, humidity and wind velocity have an influence on drying shrinkage of concrete. In this paper, to evaluate the effect of curing condition at early age on the drying shrinkage of concrete was investigated varying curing age for different binder. The principal conclusions from this research were as follows: 1) In case of 14 days of water curing, the drying shrinkage of concrete is smaller than 7 days of water curing, independence of type of binder. 2) In case of 4 days of water curing, the ratio of increase of drying shrinkage of concrete using fly-ash and slag powder is more remarkable than using portland cement alone, comparing the drying shrinkage of 7 days of water curing.

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Drying Shrinkage of High-Strength Concrete (고강도 콘크리트의 건조수축)

  • 임준영;정승호;이회근;이광명
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2002.10a
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    • pp.437-442
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    • 2002
  • Drying shrinkage is the decrease in the volume of a concrete element when it loses moisture by evaporating. Because of low water/binder ratio(W/B) and the use of chemical and mineral admixtures for high-strength concrete, the evolutions of moisture and the rate of cement hydration in high- strength concrete are significantly different from those in normal strength concrete. In this study, the drying shrinkage of high-strength concrete with and without fly ash was measured up to the age of 200 days. From the experimental test results, it was observed that the drying shrinkage decreased as the W/B decreased. As the W/B is lowered from 0.50 to 0.27, the difference of drying shrinkage between the fly ash concrete and the ordinary concrete is gradually increased.

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Shrinkage movement analysis of reinforced concrete floors constructed in stages

  • Kwan, A.K.H.;Ng, P.L.
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.167-185
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    • 2009
  • Reinforced concrete floors constructed between movement restraints often crack seriously due to shrinkage after completion. One common mitigation measure is to construct the concrete floors in stages to allow part of the shrinkage movement to take place before completion. However, shrinkage movement analysis of concrete floors constructed in stages is quite cumbersome, as the structural configuration changes during construction, thus necessitating reanalysis of the partially completed structure at each stage. Herein, a finite element method for shrinkage movement analysis of concrete floors constructed in stages is developed. It analyses the whole structure, including the completed and uncompleted portions, at all stages. The same mesh is used all the time and therefore re-meshing and location matching are no longer necessary. This is achieved by giving negligibly small stiffness to the uncompleted portions, which in reality do not exist yet. In the analysis, the locked-in strains due to increase in elastic modulus as the concrete hardens and the creep of the hardened concrete are taken into account. Most important of all, this method would enable fully automatic shrinkage movement analysis for the purpose of construction control.

Reasonable Minimum Reinforcement for Crack Control of Concrete Shrinkage (콘크리트 건조수축 균열제어를 위한 합리적인 최소철근량)

  • 김수만;오민호
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1999.10a
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    • pp.441-444
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    • 1999
  • The crack width of concrete structures subjected to shrinkage depend on a great number of parameters whose effects are restrain condition, the number and spacing of crack and the amounts of reinforcements. Through suitable reinforcement it is possible to make the individual cracks exceedigly small. This paper is to present the amount of reasonable reinforcement for crack control through a rational analysis of forces occuring in significantly restrained concrete structures due to the shrinkage. Also the analysis results from this paper are compared with the provisions for shrinkage and temperture reinforcement in the KCI concrete strucural design code.

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