Aggregate
Aggregates for shotcrete my contain
river sand, crushed sand and crushed stone with particle sizes up to
16mm, normally up to 9.5mm.
Here after is a typical and recommended
gradation of combined aggregates for shotcrete that will resulted in
perfect mix design.:
Water Cement Ratio
The water-cement ratio for wet shotcrete normally falls within a range of by weight and 0.40 to 0.55 for wet-mix shotcrete.
Dry mix design shall only include water content enough for the hydration process of cement needed for strength development.
In dry-mix shotcrete, the moisture
content of the fine and coarse aggregates should be such that the
aggregate-cement mixture will flow at a uniform rate, without slugging
or hose plugging. The optimum moisture content is generally within the
range of 3 to 6 percent. The sand should be dried or wetted as required
to bring the moisture content within that range. Large fluctuations in
moisture content should be avoided.
A crude but effective test for
determining proper predampening is the “ball-in-hand” test. A small
amount of mix is placed in the hand and squeezed tightly. When the hand
is opened, the mixture may crumble into discrete particles which
indicates too little predampening moisture and is usually light gray. If
the material holds together, or cracks but remains essentially whole,
there is enough moisture. If moisture comes off on the hand, there is
too much moisture in the mix.
Unit Weight of Concrete
The unit weight of good shotcrete is usually between 2230 to 2390 kg/m3, about the same as conventional concrete.
Cement Content
OPC cement with surface Blaine above 4500 cm2/gr is most suitable for shotcrete. Typical and recommended cement contents is:
* It is in the best interest of the end user to perform trial mixes and shotcrete trial to determine the suitable cement content, to meet other parameters, above table is used only as a guide in preliminary design and shall be decided in the results of trial mixes and trial application.
Proportioning
Shotcrete design for wet process can be
designed like conventional concrete but these mixes contains higher
volume of fine aggregate and cement. Shotcrete process can be designed
by absolute volume method or by weight.
Shotcrete design for dry process is
designed using the bulk densities of the materials, usually the water
content is not included in the calculation.
Shotcrete design for wet process can be designed like conventional concrete but these mixes contains higher volume of fine aggregate and cement. I agree with this!-shotcrete Los Angeles-
ReplyDeletegood and very informative topic about shotcrete concrete
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