| Literature DB >> 28793522 |
Jong-Sup Park1, Young Jin Kim2, Jeong-Rae Cho3, Se-Jin Jeon4.
Abstract
The strength of Ultra-High Performance Concrete (UHPC) can be sensitively affected by the curing method used. However, in contrast to the precast plant production of UHPC where a standard high-temperature steam curing is available, an optimum curing condition is rarely realized with cast-in-place UHPC. Therefore, the trend of the compressive strength development of UHPC was experimentally investigated in this study, with a focus on early-age strength by assuming the various curing conditions anticipated on site. Concrete specimens were cured under different conditions with variables including curing temperature, delay time before the initiation of curing, duration of curing, and moisture condition. Several conditions for curing are proposed that are required when the cast-in-place UHPC should gain a specified strength at an early age. It is expected that the practical use of UHPC on construction sites can be expedited through this study.Entities:
Keywords: Ultra-High Performance Concrete; cast-in-place; curing; strength
Year: 2015 PMID: 28793522 PMCID: PMC5455500 DOI: 10.3390/ma8085261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Composition of K-Ultra-High Performance Concrete (K-UHPC) (not to scale).
Mix proportion of K-Ultra-High Performance Concrete (K-UHPC) (ratio of mass).
| Item | Value | Item | Value | Item | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water-to-binder ratio | 0.2 | Filling powder | 0.3 | Expansive agent | 0.075 |
| Cement | 1 | Fine aggregate | 1.1 | Superplasticizer | 0.018 |
| Silica fume | 0.25 | Shrinkage reducing agent | 0.01 | Steel fiber (volume fraction) | 1.5%–2% |
Figure 2Compressive strength development of K-UHPC with different curing conditions [13].
Variables of curing test.
| Curing Temperature (°C) | Delay Time (h) | Continuing Time (h) | Moisture Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | 24 | 12 | enclosed, water |
| 24 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 72 | |||
| 40 | 12 | 12 | dry, enclosed, water, steam |
| 24 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 24 | 12 | ||
| 24 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 48 | 12 | ||
| 24 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 60 | 12 | 12 | |
| 24 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 24 | 12 | ||
| 24 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 48 | 12 | ||
| 24 | |||
| 48 | |||
| 90 | 24 | 48 | |
| 72 |
Figure 3Constant temperature and humidity chamber.
Figure 4Abbreviations of variables of curing test.
Compressive strengths according to curing temperatures (T-S-24-48).
| Variable | Compressive Strength (MPa) | Average Compressive Strength (MPa) | Standard Deviation (MPa) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1 | #2 | #3 | |||
| 2-W-24-48 * | 116.7 | 110.2 | 101.0 | 109.3 | 6.44 |
| 4-S-24-48 | 142.3 | 133.6 | 133.0 | 136.3 | 4.25 |
| 6-S-24-48 | 179.9 | 170.9 | 171.4 | 174.1 | 4.13 |
| 9-S-24-48 | 200.6 | 201.5 | 200.8 | 201.0 | 0.39 |
* Water curing is provided instead of steam curing in this case.
Figure 5Compressive strengths according to curing temperatures (T-M-24-48).
Figure 6Compressive strengths according to curing times (T-M-24-CT). (a) Curing temperature = 20 °C (2-M-24-CT). (b) Curing temperature = 40 °C (4-M-24-CT). (c) Curing temperature = 60 °C (6-M-24-CT). (d) Curing temperature = 90 °C (9-M-24-CT).
Figure 7Compressive strengths according to curing times (T-M-DT-CT). (a) Curing temperature = 40 °C and delay time = 12 h (4-M-12-CT). (b) Curing temperature = 40 °C and delay time = 48 h (4-M-48-CT). (c) Curing temperature = 60 °C and delay time = 12 h (6-M-12-CT). (d) Curing temperature = 60 °C and delay time = 48 h (6-M-48-CT).
Figure 8Compressive strengths according to delay times before curing (T-M-DT-48). (a) Curing temperature = 40 °C (4-M-DT-48). (b) Curing temperature = 60 °C (6-M-DT-48).
Comparison of the test results with previous studies on UHPC.
| Study | Variables | Shape and Size of Specimen (mm) | Specified Compressive Strength (MPa) | Water-to-Binder Ratio/Mineral Admixture (% of Binder) | Early-Age Strength Development (Curing Condition) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| This study | Curing temperature, delay time, continuing time, moisture condition | Cylinder (Φ 100 × 200) | 180 | 0.2/Silica fume (20%) | 180 MPa in 7 days (40 °C for 4 days or 60 °C for 2 days in moist condition) |
| SAMARIS [ | - | Cylinder (Φ 110 × 220) | 180 | 0.123/Silica fume (21%) | 150 MPa in 7 days (20 °C for 7 days in moist condition) |
| Ishii | Curing temperature | Not specified | 180 | Not specified | 147 MPa in 4 days (70 °C for 2 days) |
| Matsubara | Curing temperature | Cylinder (Φ 100 × 200) | 180 | 0.152/Silica fume (not specified) | 180 MPa in 7 days (40 °C or 60 °C for 7 days) |
| Ahlborn | Curing temperature, delay time | Cylinder (Φ 76 × 152) | 200 | Not specified | 137 MPa in 7 days (20 °C for 7 days) |
| Nakayama | Curing temperature, delay time, continuing time | Cylinder (Φ 100 × 200) | 150 | 0.15/Silica fume (15%) | 135 MPa in 7 days (60 °C for 3 h in moist condition) |
| Honma | Curing temperature | Cylinder (Φ 100 × 200) | 150–200 | 0.12–0.2/Silica fume (10%–20%) | 90–100 MPa in 7 days (20 °C for 7 days in moist condition) and |
| 130–170 MPa in 7 days (40 °C for 7 days in moist condition) |