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Materials in Civil
andConstructionEngineering土木工程材料Chapter
5PortlandCement ConcreteIntroductionComposition
of
Concrete5.3
TheMain
Technical
Propertiesof
ConcreteTheQuality
Control
of
ConcreteTheDesignofthe
MixProportionof
ConcreteContent5.1Introduction5.1 IntroductionConcrete
is
a
stone-like
material
obtained
by
permitting
a
carefully
proportioned
mixture
of
cement
sand
andgravel
or
other
aggregate
and
water
to
harden
in
formsof
theshape
and
dimensionsof
thedesired
structure.Concrete
is
widely
used
for
making
architectural
structures,
foundations,
brick/block
walls,
pavements,bridges/overpasses,
highways,runways,parking
structures,
dams,
pools/reservoirs,
pipes,
footings
for
gates,fences
and
poles,
and
even
boats.
Concrete
is
used
in
large
quantities
almost
everywhere
mankind
has
a
need
forinfrastructure.The
amount
of
concrete
used
worldwide,
ton
for
ton,
is
twice
that
of
steel,
wood,
plastics,
and
aluminumcombined.
Concrete's
use
in
the
modern
world
is
exceeded
only
by
that
of
naturally
occurring
water.
Given
thesize
of
the
concrete
industry,
and
the
fundamental
way
concrete
is
used
to
shape
the
infrastructure
of
the
modernworld,it
is
difficult
to
overstate
therole
thismaterial
plays
today.5.1 Introduction5.1.1 Characteristics
ofConcreteConvenientfor
use:thenewmixtureshavegoodplasticity
thatcan
becastintocomponentsandstructuresinvariousshapes
andsizes.Cheap:rawmaterials
areabundant
andavailable.More
than80%
of
themare
sand
andstone
whoseresources
arerich,
energyconsumption
islow,
accordingwith
theeconomicprinciple.High-strengthanddurable:thestrength
ofordinaryconcrete
is20-55
MPawith
gooddurability.Easy
tobeadjusted:
theconcrete
withdifferentfunctionscanbemadejustby
changingthevarietiesandquantitiesofcomposingmaterials
tomeetvariousdemandsofprojects.Environment-friendly:concrete
canmakefulluseofindustrialwastes,suchas
slag,
flyash
and
otherstoreduceenvironmentalpollution.(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)5.1 Introduction5.1.2 Classification
ofConcreteIn
Portland
Cement
ConcreteThe
binder
is
a
mixture
of
Portland
cement
and
water.
Asphalt
and
other
cements
are
used
to
make
varioustypes
of
concrete,
butcommonly
theterm
"concrete"
refers
to
Portland
cement
concrete.By
ApparentDensityConcrete
includes
three
types:Heavy
concrete:
0>2600
as
shielding
materials
of
atomicenergy
engineering.Normal
concrete:
0=2000-2500
in
several
bearingstructure.Lightweight
concrete:
0<1900
including
light
aggregate
concrete
and
porous
concrete.5.1 IntroductionBy
StrengthConcrete
includes
three
types:
ordinary
concrete,
high
strength
concrete,
super
strength
concrete.Ordinary
concrete:
compressivestrength
<60
MPa.High-strength
concrete:
compressive
strength>60
MPa.It
is
applied
largely
to
the
high-rise
building,
large
span
bridges
and
high-strength
prefabrication
componentsandso
on.Super-strength
concrete:
compressive
strength>80
MPa.By
Forming
or
Construction
TechnologyIt
includes
four
kinds
of
concretes:
deposit
concrete,
precast
concrete,
premixed
concrete
and
shotcreteconcrete.5.2CompositionofConcrete5.2 Composition
ofConcreteConcrete
is
made
up
of
paste
(cement
water),
aggregate
(sand,gravel)
and
admixture.
Generally,
the
amount
of
sand
and
stoneaccounts
for
above
80%
of
the
total
volume,
functioning
as
frame,so
they
are
respectively
called
as
fine
aggregate
and
coarseaggregate.
Mixed
with
water,
cement
becomes
cement
paste,
andcement
mortar
not
only
wraps
the
surface
of
particles
and
fillstheir
gaps,
but
also
wraps
stones
and
fills
their
gaps,
then
concretecoming
into
being
(Figure
5.1).
Cement
paste
can
function
asgreasing
before
hardening,
which
renders
concrete
mixture
withgood
mobility;
after
hardening,
aggregatesstick
together
and
forma
hard
entity,
knownasman-made
stone-concrete.1-coarse
aggregate;
2-fine
aggregate;
3-cement
paste.Figure
5.1
Thecement
structure5.2 Composition
ofConcrete5.2.1 CementCement
is
the
most
important
component
for
concrete
and
relatively
expensive.
There
are
many
types
of
concrete,
basedon
different
cements.
In
the
preparation
of
concrete,
the
choice
of
cement
varieties
and
strength
grades
are
directly
relatedwith
thedurability
and
economy
of
concrete.Selection
of
TypesSelect
according
to
the
different
environment.
The
six
general
cements
are
commonly
used
in
Portland
cement,ordinary
Portland
cement,
furnace-slag
cement,
Portland
pozzolan
cement,
Portland
fly-ash
cement
and
compositePortland
cement.
Theselection
principles
for
thesix
common
kinds
of
cement
can
be
referred
to
in
chapter
four.Selection
ofGradeThe
cementstrength
grades
are
corresponding
tothe
design
strength
grades
of
concrete.For
ordinary
concrete
the
cement
is
1.5-2
times
the
strength
of
the
concrete.
For
high
strength
concrete,
it
is
0.9-1.5
times
thestrength
of
theconcrete.Difference5.2 Composition
ofConcrete5.2.2
AggregateIn
cement
concrete,
60%-75%
of
the
volume
and
79%-85%
of
the
weight
are
made
up
of
aggregates.
The
aggregatesact
as
a
filler
to
reduce
the
amount
of
cement
paste
needed
in
the
mix.
In
addition,
aggregates
have
greater
volume
stabilitythan
the
cement
paste.
Therefore,
maximizing
the
amount
of
aggregate,
to
a
certain
extent,
improves
the
quality
andeconomy
of
the
mix.Generally,
the
aggregates
used
for
ordinary
concrete
can
be
divided
into
two
types
by
their
sizes.
The
one
whosediameter
is
more
than
5.00
mm
is
called
coarse
aggregate,
and
the
one
whose
diameter
is
less
than
5.00
mm
is
calledfineaggregate.1.Fine
AggregateThe
fine
aggregates
used
in
ordinary
concrete
generally
are
the
natural
sand
which
comes
into
being
when
thenatural
rock
(excluding
soft
rock
and
weathered
rock)
has
experienced
natural
weathering,
water
transportation,sorting,stacking,
and
other
kinds
of
natural
conditions;the
machine-made
sand
(is
made
by
grinding
and
sorting
by
machine,
and
the
diameter
of
the
rock
particles
is
lessthan
5.00
mm,
except
the
particles
of
soft
rock
and
weathered
rock.)
through
de-dust
treatment
and
the
mixed
sand(made
by
mixing
machine-made
sand
and
natural
sand)
arecollectively
callmanufacturedsand.5.2 Composition
ofConcreteAccording
to
different
sources,
natural
sand
can
be
divided
into
river
sand,
sea
sand,
mountain
sand
anddesalted
sea
sand.In
national
standards
Sand
for
Building
(GB/T
14684-2001)
and
Pebble
and
Crushed
Stone
for
Building(GB/T
14685-2001),
it
is
regulated
that
the
sand
for
building
can
be
classified
into
category
I,
category
II
,
andcategory
III
based
on
the
technical
quality
requirements.Category
I:
those
used
in
the
concrete
whose
strength
gradeis
more
thanC60;Category
II:
those
used
in
the
concrete
whose
strength
gradeis
betweenC30-C60;Category
III:
those
used
in
the
concrete
whose
strength
gradeis
less
thanC30.(1)
Grain
Gradation
and
CoarsenessofSandThegrain
gradation
andcoarseness
of
sandaredeterminedby
screenresidueanalysis.
Gradingregionandfinenessmoduluscan
beused
toexpress
the
gradationandthecoarseness
ofsand
particles
respectively.5.2 Composition
ofConcreteThe
relationship
between
the
cumulative
screen
residue
(which
refers
to
the
screen
residue
of
one
sieve
to
the
sumof
all
the
unit
screen
residue
percentages
whose
sieves
are
thicker
than
it)
and
the
unit
screen
residue
(which
means
themassof
screen
residue
to
the
massof
the
total
sample
sand)is
shown
in
Table
5.1.Table
5.1
The
relationship
between
cumulative
screen
residue
and
unit
screen
residueSievehole/mmUnit
screen
residue/%Cumulative
screenresidue/%4.75a1A1=a12.36a2A2=a1+a21.18a3A3=a1+a2+a30.60a4A4=a1+a2+a3+a40.30a5A5=a1+a2+a3+a4+a50.15a6A6=a1+a2+a3+a4+a5+a65.2 Composition
ofConcreteAccording
to
GB/T14684-2001,
there
are
three
grading
regions
of
sand
when
it
is
calculated
by
the
percentage
of
thecumulative
screen
residue
of
0.63
mmhole
sieve,shownin
Table
5.2.Table
5.2Grading
regions
of
sand
particles
(GB/T
14684-2001)Holy
size/mmTable
5.2
Grading
regions
of
sand
particles
(GB/T
14684-2001)Note:
①
Three
grading
regions
are
compartmentalized
by
accumulative
total
sieve
residue
percent
of
sieve
sizewith
0.63
mm.②
Comparedwith
the
numbers
listed
in
the
table,
the
accumulative
total
sieve
residue
percent
of
the
sand
can
go
beyond
5%
ofall
the
sand
except
5
mm
and
0.63
mm.Grading
regiongrading
curveof
sandisshowninFigure5.2.Hole
Size/mmGrading
RegionsⅠⅡⅢCumulative
ScreenResidue/%10000510-010-010-02.535-525-015-01.2565-3550-1025-00.6385-7170-4140-160.31595-8092-7085-550.16100-90100-90100-900.16100-90100-90100-905.2 Composition
ofConcreteThecoarseness
of
sand
isexpressed
by
finenessmodulus
(
f),
defined
as
follows:The
bigger
the
fineness
modulus
is,
the
coarser
the
sand
is.
According
to
fineness
modulus,
we
can
decide
thetypes
of
fineness
referring
to
Table
5.3.Table
5.3
Types
of
finenessItshould
beremindedthatthe
finenessmoduluscannot
reflect
thequality
of
their
gradingregions.Thesand
withthe
same
finenessmodulus
can
havevery
differentgrading
regions.
Therefore,
theparticlegradation
andthefinenessmodulus
should
beconsidered
in
thepreparation
of
concrete.
(
A2
A3
A4
A5
A6
)
5A1f100
A1
Types
offineness
fcoarse
sand3.1-3.7medium
sand2.3-3.0finesand1.6-2.2super
finesand0.7-1.55.2 Composition
ofConcrete(2)
Requirements
of
Aggregate①
ImpuritiesImpurities
hinder
the
hydration
or
causes
harden
cement
pastecorrosion,and
reduce
thebond
between
cement
paste
and
aggregate.Types:
mica,
clay,
siltand
organicsubstance.Damage:
hinder
the
bond
between
paste
and
aggregate,
weaken
thestrength
of
concrete,
increase
the
requirement
quantity
of
water,increase
the
shrinkage
of
concrete
and
bring
corrosion
to
hardencement
paste.Processing
methods:
wash
impurities
out
as
requested,
if
too
muchin
thesand.The
amount
of
impurities
must
be
in
agreement
with
GB/T
14684-2001(JGJ52-92)
(Table
5.4).Table
5.4
Amounts
of
impurities
(GB/T
14684-2001)TypeIndexⅠⅡⅢClay
content/%<1.0<2.0<5.0Clod
content/%0<1.0<2.0Mica/%<1.0<2.0<2.0Lightmatter/%<1.0<1.0<1.0Organicsubstance(colorimetry)EligibleEligibleEligibleSulfides
andsulfates/%<0.5<0.5<0.5Chloride/%<0.01<0.02<0.065.2 Composition
ofConcrete②
Particle
Shape
and
Surface
TextureParticle
shape,
surfacetextureand
their
influences
in
properties
arelisted
in
Table
5.5.Table
5.5
Particle
shape
and
surface
texture2.Coarse
AggregateAccording
to
shape
of
primary
coarse
aggregate,
it
can
be
divided
into
gravel
and
pebble.
Gravel
is
thewidely
used
primary
coarse
aggregate.By
quality,
there
are
three
types:
Ⅰ,
Ⅱ
and
Ⅲ.
Ⅰ:
those
used
in
the
concrete
whose
strength
grade
is
more
thanC60;
Ⅱ:
those
used
in
the
concrete
whose
strength
grade
is
between
C30-C60;
Ⅲ:
those
used
in
the
concretewhose
strength
gradeis
less
than
C30.TypeParticle
ShapeSurface
TextureWorkabilityStrengthRiver
sandRound
or
ellipticalLubricityWellLowSeasandMountain
sandPointedRoughBadHigh5.2 Composition
ofConcrete(1)
The
Grain
Composition
of
Stone
andthe
Maximum
Particle
DiameterThe
grain
composition
of
stone
includes
continuous
size
fraction
and
single
size
fraction
which
are
alsodetermined
by
sieveanalysis.
Thedeterminationmethod
is
thesame
withthat
of
fineaggregate.Continuous
size
fraction
has
priority
in
the
design
of
concrete
mixture
ratio.
Single
size
fraction
can
be
used
inthe
composition
of
required
continuous
size
fraction
and
also
used
with
continuous
size
fraction
to
improve
thegrading
or
to
prepare
the
continuous
size
fraction
of
larger-sized
particles.
The
single
size
fraction
should
not
beused
"singly"
in
the
preparation
of
concrete.
If
it
must
be
used
lonely,
the
technical
and
economic
analysis
shouldbe
made
and
the
experiment
should
be
conducted
to
prove
that
there
will
be
no
segregation
or
any
impact
on
thequality
of
concrete.The
maximum
nominal
size
of
stone
particle
is
the
maximum
particle
diameter
of
this
size
fraction.
If
themaximum
diameter
increases,
its
total
area
decreases
when
quality
remains
the
same.
Thus,
from
the
economicperspective,
cement
can
be
saved
by
increasing
the
maximum
diameter.
Therefore,
the
bigger
maximum
sizeshould
be
chosen
if
thecircumstance
allows.5.2 Composition
ofConcrete(2)
Requirements
of
Aggregate①
ImpuritiesClay
content,
clodcontentandthe
content
of
needle
shape
particles
and
slice
shapeparticles
(Figure5.3)
must
be
inagreement
with
GB/T
14685-2001
(JGJ52-92).Details
of
alkali-aggregate
reaction
will
be
introduced
later
in
durability
ofconcrete.
If
there
is
potential
danger,
the
alkali
content
should
be
less
than
0.6%.A
special
test
is
neededwhen
we
use
the
admixturewith
potassium
and
sodium.②
Particle
Shape
andSurface
TextureTheparticle
shape
and
surfacetexture
is
thesame
with
that
of
thesand.③
AggregateStrengthFigure
5.3
Needle
and
slice
shape
particlThere
are
two
methods
to
measure
the
strength
of
the
aggregate
strength:cubic
strength
of
rock
and
crushing
index
of
gravel.5.2 Composition
ofConcreteThe
compressive
strength
of
the
cube
is
measured
in
saturated
water.
For
ordinary
concrete:
Aggregate
strength≮1.5
fcu
forHSC:
Aggregatestrength
≮2.0
fcu.Alsoselect
thestrength
of
rock
accordingto
the
rocks
types
(Table
5.6).Table
5.6
Aggregate
strength
of
different
types(3)
Crushing
Index
of
GravelMethod:
put
the
gravel
with
the
diameter
of
10-20
mm
into
the
standardcylinder
threetimes,press
them
to
200
kNand
shiftthem
in
2.5mm
sieve.In
thisformula:
m0
is
themass
of
dry
gravel
beforecrushing;m1
is
themass
of
dry
gravel
aftercrushing
and
sifting.Crushing
index
m0
m1m0RocksStrengthIgneousrock≮80
MPaMetamorphic
rock≮60
MPaAqueous
rock≮30
MPa5.2 Composition
ofConcreteCrushing
index
of
gravelor
scree
is
listed
in
Table
5.7
and
Table
5.8.Table
5.7
Crushing
index
of
gravel
of
different
typesTable
5.8
Crushing
index
of
scree
(GB/T
14685-2001)Types
of
rockConcrete
strength
gradeGravel
crushingindex/%Aqueous
rockC60-C40≤C35≤10≤16Metamorphic
rockor
plutonic
igneous
rockC60-C40≤C35≤12≤20IgneousrockC60-C40≤C35≤13≤30ConcretestrengthgradeC60-C40≤C35Crushingindex/%≤12≤165.2 Composition
ofConcrete5.2.3 WaterforConcreteCombining
water
with
a
cementitious
material
forms
a
cement
paste
by
the
process
of
hydration.
The
cementpaste
glues
the
aggregate
together,
fills
voids
within
it,
and
makes
it
flow
more
freely.
However,
impure
waterused
to
makeconcrete
can
cause
problemswhen
settingor
in
causing
premature
failure
of
the
structure.We
should
use
drinking
water
and
clean
natural
water
for
mixing
and
conserving
concrete.Thesubstance
content
in
water
for
concrete
should
accord
with
thelimits
of
JGJ
63-89
in
Table
5.9.Table
5.9
Limits
of
the
substance
content
in
water
for
concreteTypesPrestressed
concreteReinforced
concretePlain
concretepH>4>4>4Insoluble
matter/(mg/L)<2000<2000<5000Solublematter/(mg/L)<2000<5000<10000Cl-/(mg/L)<500<1200<3500SO
2-/(mg/L)4<600<2700<2700S2-/(mg/L)<100--5.2 Composition
ofConcrete5.2.4 Concrete
AdmixtureChemical
admixtures
are
materials
in
the
form
of
powder
or
fluids
that
are
added
to
the
concrete
to
give
itcertain
characteristics
not
obtainable
with
plain
concrete
mixes.
In
normal
use,
admixture
dosages
are
less
than
5%by
mass
of
cement
and
are
added
to
the
concrete
at
the
time
of
batching/mixing.
The
common
types
of
admixturesareas
follows.1.
Water-reducing
AgentWater-reducing
agent
refers
to
the
admixture
used
for
reducing
water
consumption
and
strengtheningfunctions
when
the
slump
degrees
of
mixtures
are
basically
the
same.
By
raw
materials
and
chemicalcomponents,
water-reducing
admixtures
can
be
divided
into:
lignin
sulfonate,
alkylaryl
sulfonates
(commonlyknown
as
coal
tar
water-reducing
admixture),
sulfonated
melamine-formaldehyde
resin
sulfonate
(commonlyknown
as
melamine
water-reducer),
molasses
and
humic
aid
water-reducer,
and
others.
Based
onperformances
and
functions,
water-reducing
admixtures
can
be
divided
into:
ordinary
water-reducer,
effectivewater-reducer,
hardening
water-reducer,
retarder
water-reducer,and
airentraining
water-reducer.5.2 Composition
ofConcrete2.
AirEntraining
AdmixtureAir
entraining
admixture
refers
to
the
admixture
that
entrains
a
large
number
of
uniform,
stable
and
closed
tinybubbles
in
the
process
of
mixing
concrete
to
reduce
the
segregation
of
concrete
mixture,
improve
the
workability,
andalso
enhance
anti-freeze
ability
and
durability
of
concrete.
It
is
a
kind
of
surfactant,
too.
It
has
influences
on
concreteas
follows:It
can
improve
theworkability
of
concrete
mixtures.It
can
enhance
impermeability
and
frost
resistance.It
can
reduce
strength.
If
the
air
content
in
concrete
increases
by
1%,
its
compressive
strength
will
decrease
by4%-6%.
Thus,theadding
amount
of
air
entraining
admixture
should
be
appropriate.3.Hardening
AcceleratorHardening
accelerator
refers
to
the
admixture
that
can
accelerate
the
development
of
early
strength
of
concrete.
Itapplies
to
the
construction
that
is
constructed
in
winter,
emergency
engineering
and
time-limited
ones.
The
use
ofhardening
accelerator
can
make
C20
reach
demoulding
strength
within
16
hours
and
the
strength
allowing
floor
slabinstallment
on
it
within
36
hoursso
as
to
speed
up
theconstruction.5.2 Composition
ofConcreteSetRetarderAnt
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