EFFECTS OF PLACEMENT INTERVAL OF HIGH-FLUIDITY CONCRETES
High fluidity concrete has been used to meet requirements for marine construction thanks to its superior durability and ease of placing. High-fluidity concrete, however, having high viscosity and less bleeding, may form cold joints that may harm the uniformity of the structure. We have conducted a series of experiments to study the effect of interval and method of making joints on the strength of placing-joint of three types of high-strength and high-fluidity concrete and two types of high-fluidity lightweight concrete for marine construction. The strength of the placing-joint has shown no substantial degradation compared to those without placing-joint by rodding the joint within 120 minutes after the first placing under an ambient temperature of 20 deg C, while specimens without rodding, cured under the standard water bath, have shown 2/3 of the strength of those without placing-joint at an interval of placement less than 60 minutes.
-
Corporate Authors:
American Concrete Institute (ACI)
38800 Country Club Drive
Farmington Hills, MI United States 48331 -
Authors:
- Fujii, K
- Kemi, T
- Shimizu, G
- Sakuta, M
- Unisuga, Y
-
Conference:
- Recent Advances in Concrete Technology
- Location: Tokushima, Japan
- Date: 1998-6-7 to 1998-6-11
- Publication Date: 1998
Language
- English
Media Info
- Features: Figures; Photos; References; Tables;
- Pagination: p. 981-994
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Bleeding (Pavements); Flexural strength; Fluidity; High strength concrete; Joints; Lightweight concrete; Seas; Time intervals; Viscosity
- Uncontrolled Terms: Flowability; Joints
- Old TRIS Terms: Marine atmospheres; Placing
- Subject Areas: Bridges and other structures; Design; Highways; Materials; I24: Design of Bridges and Retaining Walls; I32: Concrete;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 00753869
- Record Type: Publication
- Report/Paper Numbers: SP 179-56
- Files: TRIS
- Created Date: Sep 16 1998 12:00AM