scholarly journals A Systematic Study on Physical and Mechanical Properties of No-Fine Concrete with Additives

Abstract. No-fine concrete (also called as pervious concrete or porous concrete) is a lightweight concrete made up of primary binder and coarse aggregates with little or no sand. Due to the reduced amount or absence of fines, it produces large number of voids which improves permeability to greater extent. Hence this type of concrete can be used in pavements and in parking lots. The literature review is carried out to study the physical and mechanical properties of no-fine concrete with additives. Various reports were collected and studied about variation in physical and mechanical properties of pervious concrete with different additives. Additives may be either mineral additives (fly ash, silica fumes, rice husk ash etc..,) or chemical additives (plasticizers, super plasticizers, retarders etc..,). Our project involved the utilization of recycled coarse aggregates, fly ash and rice husk in no-fine concrete. After this study, it was concluded that ‘upon the addition of additives, it increases permeability by decreasing its strength and vice-versa’. Balancing its permeability and strength remains challenging.

Author(s):  
Ayapilla Narasimha Murthy

This paper addresses two aspects namely a new method for manufacturing of percolating concrete blocks using different proportions of concrete mixture such as Portland cement, Coarse aggregates, fine aggregates, limestone, and water have been designed. Apart from this an attempt has also been made by adding small quantities of additives such as fly ash, rice husk ash etc. for its strength and suitability on par with the normal Concrete blocks. Another is a partial replacement of cement with supplementary cementation materials such as fly ash and metakaolin in different proportions for reducing high grade cement consumptions been proposed. The design of a Pervious Concrete is made in such a way that it allows the entire surface run off water to percolate down without retaining any drop/quantity in it. Thus, it is named as water percolating Pervious Concrete/ porous concrete. An alternative for reducing cement usage in concrete makes concrete eco-friendly. Thus, there comes an idea of partially replacing cement with supplementary cementations materials, The concern has been growing in recent years towards reducing the pollutants in water conservation and the environment. The continual urbanization has led to the increase in impervious surface area of the cities, further leading to blockage in percolation of precipitation from rainfall. This result is excess surface run off. To counteract this, pervious concrete is the solution. Hence, the pervious concrete having 15% to 35% interconnected pores by volume, allows direct infiltration of water through its structure. Since the strength of this block for highway suitability of roads is not yet tested. The main aim of this paper is to improve the strength characteristics of porous concrete. However, on comparison, with the published data it is suitable for foot paths/ pathways and parking lots and as driveways in the residential and small rural areas where less vehicular traffic. This will help in reducing the risk of water clogging and recharges the nearby ground water level. The Maintenance of the slab is also minimum and can be repaired and cleaned easily. Thus, it is worthy and useful in many ways


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (6) ◽  
pp. 185-191
Author(s):  
Amirthagadeshwaran G ◽  
Ramesh S ◽  
Selvi K

Pervious concrete is a type of concrete with high porosity. It is used for concrete flatworks application that allows the water to pass through it, thereby reducing the runoff from a site and allowing ground water recharge. The high porosity is attained by highly interconnected voids content. Pervious concrete has water to cementicious material ratio of 0.36. The mixture is composed of cementicious materials, coarse aggregates and water with no fine aggregates. In this paper works porous concrete with fly ash as a blended material is tested for strength and permeability for assessing the adaptability of fly ash as a substitute material to cement. The percentage of fly ash is varied from 10% and 20%. Various tests like compressive strength, tensile strength and water permeability are done on the specimens and results are discussed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-33
Author(s):  
MB Hossain ◽  
KM Shaad ◽  
MS Rahman ◽  
P Bhowmik

This research was carried out to investigate various physical properties of Rice Husk Ash (RHA) and, some physical and mechanical properties of concrete incorporating RHA in different proportions. The concrete specimens were tested at 7, 21 and 28 days after curing. Test results revealed that the specific gravity of RHA was found lower than that of sand. The density of concrete containing RHA was recorded between 80-110 lb.ft-3, which is lower than conventional concrete. Water absorption was found increasing with the increase of RHA content in concrete specimens. There were significant variations in compressive strength values of concrete containing 5%, 10% and 20% volume of RHA. The compressive strength of 5% RHA specimen was 150-200% higher than that of other specimens. Hence, upto 5% replacement of RHA could be recommended for making normal lightweight concrete. The splitting tensile strength was about 9-10% of compressive strength. It was concluded that upto 5% RHA can be used effectively in making normal lightweight concrete. The higher percentage of RHA could be used in making non-structural concrete where the strength of concrete is not concerned.J. Environ. Sci. & Natural Resources, 9(1): 29-33 2016


2014 ◽  
Vol 665 ◽  
pp. 203-207
Author(s):  
Xi Liu ◽  
Bei Bei Lv ◽  
Tao Wu

By choosing domestic ceramsite as lightweight aggregate, mixing with active mineral admixture (fly ash) and the water reducing agent, and adopting the method of absolute volume to design the three ceramsite concretemixture ratio, 27 groups, 243 lightweight aggregate ceramsite concrete test cubes of 100mm×100mm×100mm are obtained for compressive strength test, and the physical and mechanical properties of the aggregate are studied. At the same time, through the systematic test, the influences of the aggregate strength, water-binder ratio, fly-ash content, etc on ceramsite concrete are studied. Finally the best mixture ratio scheme for ceramsite concrete is gained, providing theoretical basis for the application of lightweight aggregate concrete.


2017 ◽  
Vol 866 ◽  
pp. 199-203
Author(s):  
Chidchanok Chainej ◽  
Suparut Narksitipan ◽  
Nittaya Jaitanong

The aims of this research were study the microstructures and mechanical properties for partial replacement of cement with Fly ash (FA) and kaolin waste (KW). Ordinary Portland cement were partially replaced with FA and KW in the range of 25-35% and 10-25% by weight of cement powder. The kaolin waste was ground for 180 minutes before using. The specimen was packing into an iron mold which sample size of 5×5×5 cm3. Then, the specimens were kept at room temperature for 24 hours and were moist cured in the incubation lime water bath at age of 3 days. After that the specimens were dry cured with plastic wrap at age of 3, 7, 14 and 28 days. After that the compounds were examined by x-ray diffraction patterns (XRD) and the microstructures were examined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The compressive strength was then investigated.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. H. Teng ◽  
H. C. Yong ◽  
M. M. A. Abdullah ◽  
N. Yong-Sing ◽  
K. Hussin

Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (21) ◽  
pp. 6692
Author(s):  
Xianhui Zhao ◽  
Haoyu Wang ◽  
Linlin Jiang ◽  
Lingchao Meng ◽  
Boyu Zhou ◽  
...  

The long-term property development of fly ash (FA)-based geopolymer (FA−GEO) incorporating industrial solid waste carbide slag (CS) for up to 360 d is still unclear. The objective of this study was to investigate the fresh, physical, and mechanical properties and microstructures of FA−GEO composites with CS and to evaluate the effects of CS when the composites were cured for 360 d. FA−GEO composites with CS were manufactured using FA (as an aluminosilicate precursor), CS (as a calcium additive), NaOH solution (as an alkali activator), and standard sand (as a fine aggregate). The fresh property and long-term physical properties were measured, including fluidity, bulk density, porosity, and drying shrinkage. The flexural and compressive strengths at 60 d and 360 d were tested. Furthermore, the microstructures and gel products were characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). The results show that the additional 20.0% CS reduces the fluidity and increases the conductivity of FA−GEO composites. Bulk densities were decreased, porosities were increased, and drying shrinkages were decreased as the CS content was increased from 0.0% to 20.0% at 360 d. Room temperature is a better curing condition to obtain a higher long-term mechanical strength. The addition of 20.0% CS is more beneficial to the improvement of long-term flexural strength and toughness at room temperature. The gel products in CS−FA−GEO with 20.0% CS are mainly determined as the mixtures of sodium aluminosilicate (N−A−S−H) gel and calcium silicate hydration (C−S−H) gel, besides the surficial pan-alkali. The research results provide an experimental basis for the reuse of CS in various scenarios.


Author(s):  
Nicole Pagan Hasparyk ◽  
Dioice Schovanz ◽  
Francieli Tiecher ◽  
Selmo Chapira Kuperman

Abstract Delayed Ettringite formation (DEF) is an internal expansive reaction that can damage concrete. DEF is strongly influenced by the temperature, above about 60-65°C, and other factors involving cement chemistry especially, but also its physical characteristics. The exposure environment over time also promotes a condition to increase deterioration from DEF. Expansions results from secondary ettringite formation are progressive and can lead concrete to microcracking impacting its performance and durability over time. Several concrete structures are pointed to be severely attacked by DEF, and test method as well a better comprehension on this pathology is necessary to promote specific and proper preventive measures to avoid future damages. Furthermore, compared to alkali-silica reaction, DEF occurs more readily and aggressively, and sometimes prematurely, depending on several factors, such as type of cement, concrete mix design, exposure conditions, among others. This paper involves an overall analysis of the behavior of concretes with two types of Portland cements (High early-strength cement and a Portland pozzolanic cement, with fly-ash) in relation to DEF process. Several data from a laboratory study where DEF was induced through a specific thermal curing procedure are presented and discussed. The analyses involved the assessment of physical, mechanical, and expansive properties besides microstructural monitoring of samples from concretes over time. These experiments allowed detecting high values of expansions from DEF (up to 1.2%) in the concrete without fly ash. The mechanical properties were severely impacted from this deleterious process; as expansions increased, losses in the mechanic and elastic properties were verified. Expansion levels in the order of 0.5% prompted remarkably high reductions and, at about 1% the losses were relevant for both strengths (tensile and compressive) and modulus of elasticity, of 60% and 80%, respectively, in the presence of cement without fly-ash. Concrete microstructure has indicated massive formations of ettringite as well as micro-cracking and the fragility of the cement matrix because of DEF. On the other hand, expansion up to 0.2% did not promote important negative effects on the properties of concrete, especially with the pozzolanic cement tested. Furthermore, an overall approach with several correlations between physical and mechanical properties was taken to obtain different levels of deterioration for a concrete presenting DEF.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 187-198
Author(s):  
Ng HUI-TENG ◽  
Heah CHENG-YONG ◽  
Mold Mustafa Al Bakri ABDULLAH ◽  
Ng YONG-SING ◽  
Ridho BAYUAJI

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