air entrained concrete
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2022 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 20210010
Author(s):  
Niloofar Parastegari ◽  
Davood Mostofinejad ◽  
Davood Poursina

Author(s):  
Farman Beg

Abstract: Air entrained concrete can be produced by introducing suitable air-entraining agent, one such commonly available material in India is Olive Oil which is being used in my experimental work. The primary objective of this study to find the appropriate amount of Olive Oil for strength and density, water absorption, other properties of concrete. For which the amount of Olive oil is varied from 0 %, 2%, 4%, and 6% Olive Oil by weight of 100 kg of cement. The test which was carried out in the experimental work were density, workability, strength, water absorption, the slump of air-entrained concrete. Total 48 No. of the concrete cube was cast for the experimental work. The result of the experiment work shows if Olive Oil is used in the range of 5-6% it will provide better workability, less water absorption with acceptable 5-7% decrease in compressive strength.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (18) ◽  
pp. 5199
Author(s):  
Il-Sun Kim ◽  
So-Yeong Choi ◽  
Yoon-Suk Choi ◽  
Eun-Ik Yang

In this study, the effect of internal pores formed by a superabsorbent polymer (SAP) was analyzed by evaluating the compressive strength, chloride penetration depth, drying shrinkage, and pore size distribution of SAP-containing concrete, while securing workability using a water-reducing agent (WRA). The experimental results showed that the amount of WRA necessary increased as the amount of SAP added increased, and that the compressive strength was the highest when the SAP content was 1.5% of the concrete mix. Drying shrinkage tended to decrease as the SAP content increased, and it decreased by approximately 31–41% when the SAP content was 2.0% compared to that of the reference mix. The SAP expanded by approximately three times inside concrete, and it was distributed within the internal pores of air-entrained concrete. The optimal SAP content in concrete mix was 1.5%, and an SAP content of 2.0% or higher adversely affected the workability and compressive strength.


2021 ◽  
Vol 300 ◽  
pp. 124193
Author(s):  
Sandor Solyom ◽  
Matteo Di Benedetti ◽  
György L. Balázs

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Xuefeng Li ◽  
Pengyu Yang

The effect of low atmospheric pressure of the environment on the air content and bubble stability of air-entrained concrete was investigated in Beijing and Lhasa. The results indicate that the reduction of atmospheric pressure can weaken the air-entraining capability of air-entraining agents (AEAs). The air content of fresh concrete decreased by 9%–39% when the atmospheric pressure dropped to 64 kPa. The bubble stability of concrete mixed at a low atmospheric pressure becomes worse. Within 50–55 min after mixing, the air content of concrete mixed at a low atmospheric pressure decreases greatly, and the void spacing factor increases obviously. The concrete mixed at a low atmospheric pressure will lose more air content when vibration time increases, leading to the decrease of air content and the increase of the spacing factor, which are more significant than the concrete mixed at normal atmospheric pressure. On the basis of the experiment results in this study, the type of AEAs must be carefully selected, and the vibration time must be strictly controlled to ensure that the air content of concrete will meet the design requirements in low atmospheric pressure areas.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 2922
Author(s):  
Adam Piekarczyk ◽  
Beata Łaźniewska-Piekarczyk

The article presents the results of original and relevant tests from the point of view of using self-compacting concrete admixtures, especially their compatibility with the cement and mutual compatibility in the case of using several admixtures in one mixture. The research contributes to the recognition of the effect of an unintentionally air-entraining superplasticiser (SP), anti-foam (AFA), viscosity-modifying (VMA) and air-entraining (AEA) admixtures on the internal frost resistance and compressive strength of self-compacting concrete. Positive and undesirable effects of the combined use of several admixtures in this area have not been the subject of extensive analyses and publications so far. Superplasticiser, which unintentionally introduced a large amount of air to the concrete mixture, had a negative effect on the strength of the concrete and a positive effect on frost resistance. The addition of AFA to such concrete did not change the strength but worsened the values of the parameters estimating frost resistance. The AEA admixture resulted in a decrease in the strength of concrete but contributed to a change in the tendency to weaken the frost resistance observed in non-air-entrained concrete. The article also deals with the problem of compliance of the frost resistance criteria estimated upon various measures. It may be disturbing that finding frost resistance based on one criterion does not always mean frost resistance on another criterion. The discrepancies can be significant and misleading.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Xuejiao Li ◽  
Wensheng Wang ◽  
Zhiqing Zhu ◽  
Kunkun Zheng

In the seasonal frozen area of northeast China, cement concrete is usually in a working environment of cold climate and chlorine erosion coupling effect. In general, with a reasonable addition of air entraining agent (AEA) and multimineral admixtures such as fly ash, blast furnace slag, and silica fume, the durability of cement concrete under the effects of freeze-thaw and salt solution can be significantly improved in cold regions. However, due to several more compositions of cement concrete with multiple mineral admixtures, it would take excessive trial mixtures to select the desired mixture proportion based on the conventional method. This means a great deal of costs of raw materials and laboratory experimental time. In this paper, the experimental scheme of mixture proportion for air-entrained concrete with multimineral admixtures was designed based on the orthogonal experiment design method. Based on the compressive strength, rapid chloride permeability, and weight loss and relative dynamic elastic modulus after salt freeze-thaw cycles, the influence of different mineral admixtures and their dosages on the durability of concrete subjected to freeze-thaw in salt solution was analyzed. After that, based on genetic algorithm, an optimization of mixture proportion was proposed, which only requires less trial mixes and accessible optimization process. The test results indicated the superiority of air-entrained concrete with multimineral admixtures when serving in salt freeze-thaw environment. Eventually, it was also verified that the optimized concrete in this paper could achieve pleasurable durability performances under salt freeze-thaw cycles.


2020 ◽  
Vol 309 ◽  
pp. 62-67
Author(s):  
Kateřina Horníková ◽  
Marek Foglar

This paper presents the results of experimental program focused on change of compressive strength of concrete exposed to elevated temperature. The change of compressive strength was studied for several types of concrete with different properties (common concrete, air-entrained concrete, concrete with polypropylene fibres, high performance concrete with steel fibres and concrete with basalt fibres). The samples were exposed to high temperatures up to 1000 0C at, the compressive strength was measured at the elevated temperature. This paper presents results of this experiment and comparison of experimental results with available data from literature and valid Eurocodes.


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