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KING SAUD UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING CIVIL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT Students Names: Abdulrahman Albedah.423102910 Ali Al-theeb.423103457 CE-477 Supplementary Cementitious Materials
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Types of SCMs Natural (ASTM C 618 Class N) Produced from natural mineral deposits (e.g., volcanic ash) May require heat treatment (e.g., metakaolin) Processed / Manufactured Silica fume (ASTM C 1240) Slag (ASTM C 989) Fly Ash (ASTM C 215)
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Benefits of SCMs Industrial by-products (waste utilization) Typically cheaper than cement (except for silica fume and metakaolin) Environmentally conscious No CO 2 emission during processing Less landfill waste
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Influence of SCMs Concrete Fresh State Heat of Hydration Water demand Workability Bleeding Setting time Concrete Hardened State Mechanical properties Durability
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Hydraulic vs. Pozzolanic Reaction (1) Latent Hydraulic Reactions: Chemical reaction with water that leads to setting and hardening of the material. Pozzolanic Reactions: Chemical reaction with calcium hydroxide (lime) and water that leads to the formation of cementitious products.
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SCM Chemical Composition
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Basic Cement Hydration 2C 3 S + 6H C-S-H + 3CH 2C 2 S + 4H C-S-H + CH Cement Chemistry Notation: C = CaO; S = SiO 2 ; H = H 2 O C-S-H; molar ratios can vary; strength-giving phase No cementitious properties (does not contribute to strength); easily leached; prone to chemical attack
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SCM Reactions C 3 S + H C-S-H + CH C 2 S + H C-S-H + CH FAST SCMs + CH + HC-S-H SLOW
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Fly Ash
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The most widely used SCM. Inorganic by-product of powdered coal after burning in power plants. Approximately ½ the cost of cement 10 % to 30 % limit on cement replacement.
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Class F Fly Ash Pozzolanic reaction slower rate of reaction than Class C fly ash Typical composition: 50% SiO 2 Pozzolanic and hydraulic reactions typically faster rate of reaction than Class F fly ash Chemical composition: >20% CaO, 30-50% SiO 2 Class C Fly Ash
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Physical Characteristics of Fly Ash Mainly solid sphere with some cenospeheres (hollow) or plerospheres (containing smaller spheres) Particle size ~ 5-20 μm Surface area ~ 300-500 m 2 /kg Color ranges from off- white to light gray
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Silica Fume
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Highly reactive pozzolan due to high SiO 2 content and extremely small particle size (i.e., large surface area). Typical cement replacement values of <10% Approximately 5X cost of portland cement
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Silica Fume Properties Physical Particle size ~0.1-0.3 μm Surface area ~15,000-25,000 m 2 /kg Generally, black in color Chemical 85 - 98% SiO 2 SiO 2 content dependent upon alloy
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Shape of Silica Fume Silica fume is almost always spherical in shape
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Slag
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Also known as ground granulated blast furnace slag. Typical cement replacement values <70%. May have pure slag (alkali-activated) matrix. Cost is slightly lower than portland cement (was significantly less).
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Slag Properties Chemical 35 - 45% CaO 32 - 38% SiO 2 8 - 16% Al 2 O 3 5 - 15% MgO Physical Particle size < 45μm Surface area ~ 400-600 m 2 /kg Angular particle shape Generally, white to off-white color
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Metakaolin
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Calcined (700-900° C) clay Typical cement replacement amounts of <10% (similar to silica fume) More expensive than portland cement
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Metakaolin Al 2 Si 2 O 5 (OH) 4 700-900 °C Al 2 Si 2 O 7 De-hydroxylation +
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Metakaolin Average particle size: 1-2 µm Chemical composition: 45-55% SiO 2 40-45% Al 2 O 3 Average surface area: 10,000-25,000 m 2 /kg
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Effect of SCMs on Cement & Concrete Properties
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Many of the beneficial effects of using SCM are related to the effect they have on the pore structure by: Micro-filler effect: Increased packing of cementitious particles. Increased C-S-H: Replacing porous CH with C-S-H. Wall effect: Densifying the ITZ (interfacial transition zone) at the cement-aggregate interface. Benefits of SCMs
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Pore blocking: which occurs because of a combination of these factors. These effects refine the pore structure and reduce the permeabilty of concrete thereby making it more resistant to the penetration of deleterious agents. Benefits of SCMs
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Heat of Hydration Most SCMs reduce overall heat of hydration and rate of heat liberation. Eliminated need for ASTM Type IV cement.
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Setting Time Slag and Class C Fly Ash: ↑ setting time (15-60 minutes for initial, 30-120 minutes for final). Class F Fly Ash: ↑ setting time (more than Class C); dependent upon chemical composition Silica Fume and Metakaolin: ↓ setting time due to high reactivity.
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Water Demand Fly Ash: ↓ water demand due to “ball bearing” effect of spherical particles For every 10% FA, ~2-3% reduction in water demand Silica Fume: ↑ water demand due to increasing surface area. Slag: ↓ water demand.
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Workability Silica fume containing concretes tend to be “sticky” and more difficult to finish, leading to decreased workability or the need for high-range water reducer. Slag and fly ash improve workability.
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Bleeding Fly ash: ↓ bleeding Slag: ↕ bleeding; depends upon fineness of slag particles (fine particles decrease bleeding and vice versa for coarse particles) Silica fume: ↓ bleeding and may eliminate it altogether, thus making finishing difficult
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Rate of Strength Gain (1)
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Total Strength Gain Percentage Of Silica Fume Effect Using smaller particle sizes than cement, SCMs improve “particle packing,” leading to decreased transition zone porosity and increased overall strength gain.
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