ACI Global Home Middle East Region Portal Western Europe Region Portal
Email Address is required Invalid Email Address
In today’s market, it is imperative to be knowledgeable and have an edge over the competition. ACI members have it…they are engaged, informed, and stay up to date by taking advantage of benefits that ACI membership provides them.
Read more about membership
Learn More
Become an ACI Member
Topics In Concrete
Home > Publications > International Concrete Abstracts Portal
The International Concrete Abstracts Portal is an ACI led collaboration with leading technical organizations from within the international concrete industry and offers the most comprehensive collection of published concrete abstracts.
Showing 1-5 of 39 Abstracts search results
Document:
SP121-23
Date:
November 1, 1990
Author(s):
Tor Arne Hammer and Erik J. Sellevoid
Publication:
Symposium Papers
Volume:
121
Abstract:
Two test methods were used to investigate the frost resistance of high-strength concrete with and without air-entraining agents: a volume deterioration method (ASTM C 666) and a salt-scaling method (SwedishStandard SS137244) similar to ASTM C 672. In addition, low-temperature calorimetry was used to measure ice formation in concretes after a drying/resaturation treatment. For concretes with 0 and 10 percent silica fume contents and water-binder ratios from 0.40 to 0.25, the calorimetry results showed only very minor ice formation down to 20 C. The cement used was a high-strength type (Norwegian P30 4A). This result contrasts an earlier calorimeter result with ordinary portland cement, and indicates that the P30 4A cement produces a more finely divided capillary pore structure. The salt-scaling tests showed that the high-strength concrete with water-to-binder ratios less than about 0.37 exhibits acceptable resistance to salt-scaling, even without air entrainment. The ASTM C 666 test results showed relatively severe damage to concretes with water-to-binder ratios down to 0.28. No air-entrained concrete was tested with ASTM C 666. This result is in apparent conflict with the calorimetry results and suggests that the damage may be related not to ice formation but to thermal fatigue effects caused by differences that are too large between the thermal expansion coefficients of aggregates and binders.
DOI:
10.14359/2561
SP121-26
P. Read, G. G. Carette, and V. M. Malhotra
Presents data at ages up to 1 year on the strength development characteristics of high-strength concrete ( > 80 MPa) incorporating blast furnace slag and/or silica fume or high volumes of ASTM Class F fly ash. Six concrete mixtures of various compositions were investigated in this study. Five of these mixtures had the same cementitious materials content of 485 kg/m3 of concrete, and the sixth mixture was typical of high-volume fly ash concrete incorporating a cement content of 150 kg/m3 of concrete and large volumes of fly ash. The concrete was obtained from a commercial ready-mixed concrete plant. For each mixture, three types of structural elements simulating a thick wall, a thin wall, and a thick column were fabricated for testing under field curing conditions. Cores, 100 x 200 mm in size, were drilled at ages up to 1 year for determining the in situ compressive strength of the various concrete elements. In addition, a number of 150 x 300 mm cylinders were cast from each mixture for long-term strength testing. The test results indicate that compressive strengths approaching 100 Mpa at 1 year can be achieved using a superplasticizer, with or without the use of supplementary cementing materials. The moist-cured test cylinders and the drilled cores from the various concrete elements indicate continued gain in strength of concrete at ages at least up to 365 days. The use of silica fume is generally required if high early-age strengths are to be achieved in structural elements. However, if high early-age strength is not a critical factor, then the high-volume fly ash concrete seems to be the most promising system.
10.14359/2564
SP121-31
V. M. Malhotra
Reports results of a study undertaken to develop high-strength lightweight concrete having compressive strength of about 700 MPa and a density of less than 2000 kg/m3. The materials used consisted of an expanded shale lightweight aggregate of Canadian origin, ASTM Type III cement, low-calcium fly ash, and condensed silica fume. A series of 7 concrete mixtures involving 14 concrete batches were made. The cement or cementitious material content of the mixtures ranged from 300 to 600 kg/m3. All mixtures were air entrained and superplasticized. A large number of test cylinders and prisms were cast for the determination of mechanical properties and drying shrinkage of concrete. From the results of this investigation, it is concluded that concrete with a compressive strength of about 70 MPa at 365 days and density of less than 2000 kg/m3 can be made incorporating supplementary cementing materials. The highest compressive strength achieved was 69.3 MPa at 365 days for a mixture with a cementitious material content of 600 kg/m3 of concrete; the highest flexural strength obtained was 8.7 MPa at 28 days.
10.14359/2567
SP121-33
V. Novokshchenov and W. Whitcomb
Describes production and properties of lightweight concretes based on a recently developed expanded siliceous aggregate. With the unit weight below 20 lb/ft3, this aggregate is one of the lightest among aggregates obtained by processing natural materials, after expanded perlite and exfoliated vermiculite. It was expected that this aggregate would be most effective in manufacturing moderate strength concretes with the unit weight ranging from 50 to 85 lb/ft3 and compressive strengths below 2500 psi. Recent experiments show that, in addition to this traditional application, the expanded siliceous aggregate can also be used to manufacture structural and even high-strength concretes with compressive strengths 10,200 psi and greater.
10.14359/2571
SP121-34
M. Berra and G. Ferrerra
Reports on high-strength lightweight and normal weight concretes. Sintered fly ash lightweight aggregates, crushed limestones, and two types of cement with different contents were investigated. All the concretes contained silica fume and a high-range water-reducing admixture. To obtain high specific strengths (i.e., ratio of strength to relative density), lightweight concretes were prepared with only lightweight particles (coarse and fine), reaching strengths higher than 60 MPa with density of about 1700 kg/m3. The results of physical (permeability, thermal conductivity, thermal diffusivity, and thermal expansion coefficient) and mechanical (compression, direct tension, direct shear, modulus of elasticity, bond strength, fracture energy, and compression softening behavior) tests, carried out on specimens cured for different ages at two curing conditions (20 C and 95 and 50 percent relative humidity, respectively), are reported and discussed.
10.14359/2576
Results Per Page 5 10 15 20 25 50 100
Edit Module Settings to define Page Content Reviewer