Test Method for Determining the Potential Alkali-Silica Reactivity of Combinations of Cementitious Materials and Aggregate (Accelerated Mortar-Bar Method)

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
2003 ◽  
Vol 1834 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang-Seon Shon ◽  
Shondeep L. Sarkar ◽  
Dan G. Zollinger

The ASTM C1260 accelerated mortar-bar test is a commonly used method for rapid identification of potential alkali-aggregate reactivity and may also be used for assessing the effectiveness of supplementary cementitious materials in suppressing alkali–silica reactivity (ASR). A general criticism of this test method is the severity of test conditions. It is not uncommon for aggregates with a good field-performance track record and no history of ASR to test reactive by this method. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of fly ash in controlling expansion due to ASR, using a modified ASTM C1260 test. Three different strengths of NaOH solution were used to test reactive, potentially reactive, and nonreactive aggregates in the presence of Class F and Class C fly ash at 20% and 35% replacement by mass of cement. The other variables included high- and low-alkali cement, extended curing time, and a longer testing period of 28 days. A correlation was drawn between additional evaporable water and expansion due to ASR.


2013 ◽  
Vol 671-674 ◽  
pp. 1715-1720
Author(s):  
Jing Wang ◽  
Gu Hua Li ◽  
Jun Peng Zhang ◽  
Jun Jie Zhou ◽  
Feng Ming Sun ◽  
...  

Test the alkali-silica reactivity of slate aggregate in Guizhou using mortar-bar method in JTG E42-2005of China and accelerated mortar-bar method in TB/T2922.5-2002 of China. The results show that the six months expansion is 0.11% with mortar-bar method, the aggregate has low alkali activity. The 14-days expansion exceeds 0.30% with accelerated mortar-bar method, according to the TB10005-2010, the aggregate has high alkali reactivity. Obviously, the accelerated mortar-bar method is safer than the mortar-bar method, but the test parameters and test conditions of accelerated mortar-bar method have some differences with the aggregate physical environments. According to the accelerated mortar bar method, the thesis proposes an improved test method for evaluating the alkali-silica reactivity of slate aggregate.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. 854-859
Author(s):  
I. Prasetia

Alkali silica reaction (ASR) is influenced by external factors such as the surrounding environment of high alkalinity. Countries with cold climate have a high probability to be exposed to high concentrations of NaCl solution by the deicing salt. This condition will lead to serious ASR problems in concrete, if the aggregates contain reactive silica. The main research work in this paper is to investigate the effect of 15% replacement ratio of high quality fine fly ash (FA15%) and 42% replacement ratio of blast furnace slag (BFS42%) on the ASR mitigation in concrete with different alkali amount inside the pore solution. The experiments were conducted according to the accelerated mortar bars experiment following the JIS A1146 mortar bar test method. In addition, post-analysis such as observation of ASR gel formation by the Uranyl Acetate Fluorescence Method and observation of thin sections using a Polarizing Microscope were also conducted. The mortar bar tests show a very good mitigation effect of supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs). The results show that only small ASR expansions, which can be categorized as “innocuous”, occurred for specimens with 1.2% Na2Oeq using FA15% and BFS42%. However, larger alkali amount inside the system will require more SCMs amount.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 686
Author(s):  
Amr Aboulela ◽  
Matthieu Peyre Lavigne ◽  
Amaury Buvignier ◽  
Marlène Fourré ◽  
Maud Schiettekatte ◽  
...  

The biodeterioration of cementitious materials in sewer networks has become a major economic, ecological, and public health issue. Establishing a suitable standardized test is essential if sustainable construction materials are to be developed and qualified for sewerage environments. Since purely chemical tests are proven to not be representative of the actual deterioration phenomena in real sewer conditions, a biological test–named the Biogenic Acid Concrete (BAC) test–was developed at the University of Toulouse to reproduce the biological reactions involved in the process of concrete biodeterioration in sewers. The test consists in trickling a solution containing a safe reduced sulfur source onto the surface of cementitious substrates previously covered with a high diversity microbial consortium. In these conditions, a sulfur-oxidizing metabolism naturally develops in the biofilm and leads to the production of biogenic sulfuric acid on the surface of the material. The representativeness of the test in terms of deterioration mechanisms has been validated in previous studies. A wide range of cementitious materials have been exposed to the biodeterioration test during half a decade. On the basis of this large database and the expertise gained, the purpose of this paper is (i) to propose a simple and robust performance criterion for the test (standardized leached calcium as a function of sulfate produced by the biofilm), and (ii) to demonstrate the repeatability, reproducibility, and discriminability of the test method. In only a 3-month period, the test was able to highlight the differences in the performances of common cement-based materials (CEM I, CEM III, and CEM V) and special calcium aluminate cement (CAC) binders with different nature of aggregates (natural silica and synthetic calcium aluminate). The proposed performance indicator (relative standardized leached calcium) allowed the materials to be classified according to their resistance to biogenic acid attack in sewer conditions. The repeatability of the test was confirmed using three different specimens of the same material within the same experiment and the reproducibility of the results was demonstrated by standardizing the results using a reference material from 5 different test campaigns. Furthermore, developing post-testing processing and calculation methods constituted a first step toward a standardized test protocol.


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