Concrete is one of the most commonly
used building materials.
 Concrete is a composite material made
from several readily available constituents
(aggregates, sand, cement, water).
 Concrete is a versatile material that can
easily be mixed to meet a variety of
special needs and formed to virtually any
shape.
Ability to be cast
 Economical
 Durable
 Fire resistant
 Energy efficient
 On-site fabrication
Low tensile strength
 Low ductility
 Volume instability
 Low strength to weight ratio
Cement
Water
Fine Agg.
Coarse Agg.
Admixtures
 Workability
 Consistency
 Segregation
 Bleeding
 Setting
Time
 Unit Weight
 Uniformity
It is desirable that freshly mixed concrete
be relatively easy to transport, place,
compact and finish without harmful
segregation.
A concrete mix satisfying these conditions
is said to be workable.
Method and duration of transportation
 Quantity and characteristics of
cementing materials
 Aggregate grading, shape and surface
texture
 Quantity and characteristics of
chemical admixtures
 Amount of water
 Amount of entrained air
 Concrete & ambient air temperature
Workability is the most
important property of
freshly mixed concrete.
 There is no single test
method that can
simultaneously measure
all the properties involved
in workability.
 It is determined to a large
extent by measuring the
consistency of the mix.
Consistency is the fluidity or degree of
wetness of concrete.
It is generally dependent on the shear
resistance of the mass.
It is a major factor in indicating the
workability of freshly mixed concrete.
Test methods for measuring consistency are:
Flow test  measures the amount of flow
Kelly-Ball test  measures the amount of
penetration
Slump test (Most widely used test!)
Slump Test is related with the ease with
which concrete flows during placement (TS
2871, ASTM C 143)
10 cm
30 cm
20 cm
The slump cone is filled in 3 layers.
Every layer is evenly rodded 25
times.
Measure the slump by determining the vertical
difference between the top of the mold and the
displaced original center of the top surface of the
Segregation refers to a separation of the
components of fresh concrete, resulting in a
non-uniform mix
The primary causes of
segregation are
differences in specific
gravity and size of
constituents of concrete.
Moreover, improper
mixing, improper placing
and improper
consolidation also lead
to segregation.
Sp.Gr.
Size
Cement 3-3.15 5-80 m
C.Agg.
2.4-2.8 5-40 mm
F.Agg.
2.4-2.8
< 5 mm
Some of the factors affecting
segregation:
 Larger maximum particle size (25mm) and
proportion of the larger particles.
 High specific gravity of coarse aggregate.
 Decrease in the amount of fine particles.
 Particle shape and texture.
 Water/cement ratio.
Bleeding is the tendency of water to rise to
the surface of freshly placed concrete.
It is caused by
the inability of
solid constituents
of the mix to hold
all of the mixing
water as they
settle down.
A special case of
Undesirable effects of bleeding are:
With the movement of water towards the top, the
top portion becomes weak & porous (high w/c). Thus
the resistance of concrete to freezing-thawing
decreases.
Water rising to the surface carry fine particles of
cement which weaken the top portion and form
laitance. This portion is not resistant to abrasion.
Water may accumulate under the coarse agg. and
reinforcement. These large voids under the particles
may lead to weak zones and reduce the bond
between paste and agg. or paste and reinforcement.
The tendency of concrete to bleeding
depends largely on properties of cement. It
is decreased by:
Increasing the fineness of cement
Increasing the rate of hydration (C3S, C3A and
alkalies)
Adding pozzolans
Reducing water content
The aim of mixing is to blend all of the
ingredients of the concrete to form a uniform
mass and to coat the surface of aggregates
with cement paste.
Ready-Mix concrete: In this type ingredients
are introduced into a mixer truck and mixed
during transportation to the site.
Wet  Water added before transportation
Dry  Water added at site
Mixing at the site
Hand mixed
Mixer mixed
Mixing at Site
Mixing time should be sufficient to produce a
uniform concrete. The time of mixing
depends on the type of mixer and also to
some properties of fresh concrete.
Undermixing  non-homogeneity
Overmixing  danger of water loss, brekage of
aggregate particles
Inadequate
consolidation can
result in:
 Honeycomb
 Excessive amount of entrapped
air voids (bugholes)
 Sand streaks
 Placement lines (Cold joints)
The process of compacting concrete
consists essentially of the elimination of
entrapped air. This can be achieved by:
Tamping or rodding the concrete
Use of vibrators
Internal vibrator: The poker is immersed
into concrete to compact it. The poker is
easily removed from point to point.
External vibrators: External vibrators clamp
direct to the formwork requiring strong, rigid
forms.
Vibrator
d
R
1 R
Radius of Action
Adapted from ACI 309
Diameter Recommended Approximate Rate of
of head,
frequency,
radius of placement,
(vib./min.) action, (mm) (m3/h)
(mm)
20-40
30-60
50-90
9000-15,000
8500-12,500
8000-12,000
80-150
130-250
180-360
Application
0.8-4
Plastic and flowing
concrete in thin
members. Also used for
lab test specimens.
2.3-8
Plastic concrete in thin
walls, columns, beams,
precast piles, thin slabs,
and along construction
joints.
4.6-15
Stiff plastic concrete
(less than 80-mm
slump) in general
construction .
CORRECT
Vertical penetration a few
inches into previous lift (which
should not yet be rigid) of
systematic regular intervals will
give adequate consolidation
INCORRECT
Haphazard random penetration
of the vibrator at all angles and
spacings without sufficient
depth will not assure intimate
combination of the two layers
To aid in the removal of trapped air the
vibrator head should be rapidly plunged
into the mix and slowly moved up and
down.
The actual
completion of
vibration is judged by
the appearance of
the concrete surface
which must be
neither rough nor
Form vibrators
 Vibrating tables (Lab)
 Surface vibrators
Vibratory screeds
Plate vibrators
Vibratory roller screeds
Vibratory hand floats or
trowels
External vibrators are rigidly clamped to the
formwork so that both the form & concrete
are subjected to vibration.
A considerable amount of work is needed to
vibrate forms.
Forms must be strong and tied enough to
prevent distortion and leakage of the grout.
Vibrating Table:
used for small
amounts of
concrete
(laboratory and
some precast
elements)
 Properties
of concrete can improve with
age as long as conditions are favorable for
the continued hydration of cement. These
improvements are rapid at early ages and
continues slowly for an indefinite period of
time.
 Curing is the procedures used for
promoting the hydration of cement and
consists of a control of temperature and
the moisture movement from and into the
concrete.
The primary objective of curing is to keep
concrete saturated or as nearly saturated
as possible.
 Hydration reactions
can take place in
only saturated water
filled capillaries.
Methods which supply additional water to the
surface of concrete during early hardening
stages.
1.
Using wet covers
Sprinkling
Ponding
Methods that prevent loss of moisture from
concrete by sealing the surface.
2.
Water proof plastics
Use liquid membrane-forming compounds
Forms left in place
Methods that accelerate strength gain by
supplying heat & moisture to the concrete.
3.
By using live steam (steam curing)
Heating coils.
Rapid hydration  early setting  rapid loss
of workability
 Extra problems due to
 Low humidity
 Wind, excessive evaporation
 Direct sunlight
Solutions
Windbreaks
Cooled Concrete Ingredients
Water ponding (cooling due to evaporation)
Reflective coatings/coverings
Keep concrete temperature above 5 C to
minimize danger of freezing
Solutions
Heated enclosures, insulation
Rely on heat of hydration for larger sections
Heated ingredients --- concrete hot when placed
High early strength cement
Concrete uniformity is
checked by conducting tests
on fresh and hardened
concretes.
Slump, unit weight, air content
tests
Strength tests
Due to heteregeneous nature of concrete,
there will always be some variations. These
variations are grouped as:
 Within-Batch Variations : inadequate mixing, nonhomogeneous nature
 Batch-to-Batch Variations : type of materials used,
changes in gradation of aggregates, changes in
moisture content of aggregates
The principal properties of hardened
concrete which are of practical importance
can be listed as:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Strength
Permeability & durability
Shrinkage & creep deformations
Response to temperature variations
Of these compressive strength is the most
important property of concrete. Because;
Of the abovementioned hardened properties
compressive strength is one of the most
important property that is often required,
simply because;
1. Concrete is used for compressive loads
2. Compressive strength is easily obtained
3. It is a good measure of all the other properties.
What
Doesnt?
Effect of materials and mix proportions
 Production methods
 Testing parameters
The strength of a concrete specimen
prepared, cured and tested under
specified conditions at a given age
depends on:
1. w/c ratio
2. Degree of compaction
 Compressive
Strength is determined by
loading properly prepared and cured cubic,
cylindrical or prismatic specimens under
compression.
Cubic: 15x15x15 cm
Cubic specimens are crushed after rotating
them 90 to decrease the amount of friction
caused by the rough finishing.
 Cylinder: h/D=2 with h=15
To decrease the amount of friction, capping of
the rough casting surface is performed.
COMPRESSIVE STRENGTH
Cubic specimens
without capping
Cylindrical
specimens
with capping
COMPRESSIVE STRENGTH
Bonded sulphur capping
Unbonded neoprene pads
The compressive strength value depends on
the shape and size of the specimen.
 Tensile
Strength can be obtained either by
direct methods or indirect methods.
Direct methods suffer from a number of difficulties
related to holding the specimen properly in the
testing machine without introducing stress
concentration and to the application of load without
eccentricity.
Due to applied compression load a fairly
uniform tensile stress is induced over nearly
2/3 of the diameter of the cylinder
perpendicular to the direction of load
application.
st =
2P
Dl
Splitting
Tensile
Strength
P: applied compressive
load
D: diameter of specimen
l: length of specimen
The advantage of the splitting test over the
direct tensile test is the same molds are
used for compressive & tensile strength
determination.
The test is simple to perform and gives
uniform results than other tension tests.
The flexural tensile strength at failure or the
modulus of rupture is determined by loading
a prismatic concrete beam specimen.
The results
obtained are
useful because
concrete is
subjected to
flexural loads
more often than
it is subjected to
P
d
bd3
I=
12
M=Pl/
4
(Pl/4) (d/2)
M
3
=
=
cI
bd3/12
2
P/2
Pl
bd
2
P/2
=
M=Pl/
(Pl/6) (d/2)
bd3/1
2
Pl
=
bd
2
1)
Factors depended on
the test type:
Size of specimen
Size of specimen in
relation with size of
agg.
Support condition af
specimen
Moisture condition of
specimen
Type of loading adopted
Rate of loading
Type of test machine
2.
Factors independent of
test type:
Type of cement
Type of agg.
Degree of compaction
Mix proportions
Type of curing
Type of stress situation
ult
(40-50%)
ult
ult
- relationship
for concrete is
nonlinear.
However,
specially for
cylindrical
specimens with
h/D=2, it can be
assumed as
linear upto 40-
Due to the
nonlinearity of the  diagram, E is the
defined by:
1. Initial Tangent Method
2. Tangent Method
3. Secant Method
ACI  E=15200 ult  28-D cylindrical comp.str.
(kgf/cm2)
Permeability is important because:
1. The penetration of some aggresive solution may
result in leaching out of Ca(OH)2 which adversely
affects the durability of concrete.
2. In R/C ingress of moisture of air into concrete
causes corrosion of reinforcement and results in
the volume expansion of steel bars, consequently
causing cracks & spalling of concrete cover.
3. The moisture penetration depends on
permeability & if concrete becomes saturated it is
more liable to frost-action.
4. In some structural members permeability itself is
of importance, such as, dams, water retaining
tanks.
The permeability of concrete is controlled by
capillary pores. The permeability depends
mostly on w/c, age, degree of hydration.
In general the higher the strength of cement
paste, the higher is the durability & the lower
is the permeability.
A durable concrete is the one which will
withstand in a satisfactory degree, the
effects of service conditions to which it will
be subjected.
Factors Affecting Durability:
 External  Environmental
 Internal  Permeability, Characteristics of
ingredients, Air-Void System...
Macrostructure
 Aggregates (CA, FA)
 Hydrated cement paste (hcp)
 Entrapped air voids
Microstructure
 Hydrated cement paste (Hydration products: C-S-H, ettringite,
monosulfate; porosity: gel, capillary pores entrained/ entrapped
air voids)
 Transition zone (TZ)
Macrostructure
Microstructure
Macrostructure
Microstructure
 Alkali-silica reaction:
Visible cracks in
Reaction product
hcp and
forms at TZ and
aggregates due to
expands
volume changes
 Frost action: Water
(to understand
freezes in capillary
pores and expands
cause of cracks,
 Sulfate attack:
microstructure
reaction products
should be
form in hcp and
examined)
expand
When water penetrates into concrete, it
dissolves the non-hydraulic CH (and various
salts, sulfates and carbonates of Na, K, Ca)
Remember C-S-H and CH is produced upon
hydration of C3S and C2S
 These salts are taken outside of concrete by
water and leave a salt deposit.
 Ground
water in clayey soils containing
alkali sulfates may affect concrete.
 These solutions attack CH to produce
gypsum. Later, gypsum and calcium
alumina sulfates together with water
react to form ettringite.
 Formation of ettringite is hardened
cement paste or concrete leads to volume
expansion thus cracking.
 Moreover, Magnesium sulfate may lead to
the decomposition of the C-S-H gel.
Seawater contains some amount of Na and
Mg Sulfates. However, these sulfates do not
cause severe deleterious expansion/cracking
because both gypsum and ettringite are
soluble in solutions containing the Cl ion.
However, problem with seawater is the
frequent wetting/drying and corrosion of
reinforcing steel in concrete.
To reduce the sulfate attack
1. Use low w/c ratio reduced permeability & porosity
2. Use proper cement  reduced C3A and C3S
3. Use pozzolans  they use up some of the CH to
produce C-S-H
 Concrete
is pretty resistant to acids. But in
high concentrations:
Causes leaching of the CH
 Causes disintegration of the C-S-H gel.
 Ca(OH)2
+ CO2  CaCO3 + H2O
 Accompanied
by shrinkage  carbonation
shrinkage
 Makes
the steel vulnerable to corrosion (due to
reduced alkalinity)
 Alkalies
of cement + Reactive Silica of Aggs 
Alkali-Silica Gel
 Expansions
 Slow
 Dont
in volume
process
use aggs with reactive silica or use cements
with less alkalies.
 Electrochemical
reactions in the steel rebars
of a R/C structure results in corrosion products
which have larger volumes than original steel.
 Thus
this volume expansion causes cracks in
R/C. In fact, steel is protected by a thin film
provided by concrete against corrosion.
However, that shield is broken by CO2 of air or
the Cl- ions.
 Water
when freezes expands in volume. This
will cause internal hydraulic pressure and
cracks the concrete.
To prevent the
concrete from this
distress airentraining
admixtures are
used to produce
air-entrained
Aggregates have to be hard & resistant to
wear.
Bleeding & finishing practices are also
important.
W+C+C.Agg.+F.Agg.+Admixtures  Weights /
Volumes?
There are two sets of requirements which enable
the engineer to design a concrete mix.
1.
The requirements of concrete in hardened state.
These are specified by the structural engineer.
2.
The requirements of fresh concrete such as
workability, setting time. These are specified by the
construction engineer (type of construction, placing
methods, compacting techniques and
transportation)
Mix design is the process of selecting suitable
ingredients of concrete & determining their
relative quantities with the objective of
producing as economically as possible
concrete of certain minimum properties such
as workability, strength & durability.
So, basic considerations in a mix design is
cost & min. properties.
 Cost  Material + Labor
Water+Cement+Aggregate+Admix
tures
Most expensive (optimize)
Using less cement causes a decrease in
shrinkage and increase in volume stability.
Min.Properties Strength has to be more
than..
DurabilityPermeability has to be
WorkabilitySlump has to be...
 In
the past specifications for concrete mix
design prescribed the proportions of cement,
fine agg. & coarse agg.
1 : 2 : 4
Weight Fine
of
Agg
cement
.
Coars
e
Agg.
 However, modern specifications do
not use these fixed ratios.
 Modern
specifications specify min
compressive strength, grading of agg, max
w/c ratio, min/max cement content, min
entrained air & etc.
 Most
of the time job specifications dictate
the following data:
Max w/c
Min cement content
Min air content
Slump
Strength
Durability
Type of cement
Admixtures
Max agg. size
1.
Choice of slump (Table 14.5)
2.
Choice of max agg. size
1/5 of the narrowest dimension of the mold
1/3 of the depth of the slab
 of the clear spacing between reinforcement
Dmax < 40mm
3.
Estimation of mixing water & air content
(Table 14.6 and 14.7)
4.
Selection of w/c ratio (Table 14.8 or 14.9)
5.
6.
Calculation of cement content with selected
water amount (step 3) and w/c (step 4)
Estimation of coarse agg. content (Table 14.10)
7.
8.
Calculation of fine aggregate content with
known volumes of coarse aggregate, water,
cement and air
Adjustions for aggregate field moisture
9.
Trial batch adjustments
 The properties of the mixes in trial batches
are checked and necessary adjustments are
made to end up with the minimum required
properties of concrete.
 Moreover, a lab trial batch may not always
provide the final answer. Only the mix made
and used in the job can guarantee that all
properties of concrete are satisfactory in
every detail for the particular job at hand.
Thats why we get samples from the field
mixes for testing the properties.
Example:
 Slump  75-100 mm
 Dmax  25 mm
 fc,28 = 25 MPa
 Specific Gravity of cement = 3.15
 Non-air entrained concrete
Coarse Agg.
Fine Agg.
SSD Bulk Sp.Gravity
2.68
2.62
Absorption
0.5%
1.0%
Total Moist.Content
2.0%
5.0%
1600 kg/m3
2.6
Dry rodded Unit Weight
Fineness Modulus
1.
2.
3.
Slump is given as 75-100 mm
Dmax is given as 25 mm
Estimate the water and air content
Slump and Dmax  W=193 kg/m3
Entrapped Air  1.5%
(Table 14.6)
4.
Estimate w/c ratio (Table 14.8)
fc & non-air entrained  w/c=0.61 (by wt)
5.
Calculation of cement content
W = 193 kg/m3 and w/c=0.61
C=193 / 0.61 = 316 kg/m3
6.
Coarse Agg. from Table 14.10
Dmax and F.M.  VC.A=0.69 m3
Dry WC.A. = 1600*0.69 = 1104 kg/m3
SSD WC.A. = 1104*(1+0.005) = 1110
kg/m3
7.
To calculate the F.Agg. content the
volumes of other ingredients have to be
determined.
193
= 0.193
Vwater
1.0*100 m3
=
0 316
= 0.100
Vcement
3.15*100 m3
=
0
111
= 0.414
VC.Agg. =
2.68*100
0
m3
0
Vair = 0.015
m3 (1.5%*1)
V=
M
Sp.Gr.*
w
V = 0.722 m3  VF.Agg = 1-0.722 = 0.278 m3
WF.Agg = 0.278*2.62*1000 = 728 kg/m3
Based on SSD weight of aggregates
8. Adjustment for Field Moisture of
Aggregates
WDry = WSSD /
(1+a)
WField =WDry
*(1+m)
Correction for water
From coarse aggregate: 1127-1110 =48
17kg
From fine aggregate:
759-728 = 31
extra
Corrected water amount : 193  48 =
Based on field weight of aggregates
9.
Trial Batch
Usually a 0.02 m3 of concrete is sufficient
to verify the slump and air content of the
mix. If the slump and air content are
different readjustments of the proportions
should be made.