structural-eng
Structural
- Jan 26, 2017
- 39
I have project in Texas where the concrete test revealed that the concrete temperature of at least one of the trucks was 98 degrees F during the pour. The contractor was 3/4 into pouring multiple large piers and decided to use the concrete to finish the pour even though the temperature exceeded the 95 degree ACI limit. I didn't find out about this until almost 2 weeks after the pour. They submitted concrete strength result tests for us to review in hopes we would say the high concrete temperature wasn't a concern. I explained that strength tests weren't helpful because they were lab cured and aren't representative of the in-place concrete so they won't reveal if there is damage from the high temperature. I recommended the contractor discuss with Terracon whether cores could be taken and inspected to confirm there was no damage to the concrete. I recently got compressive test results for cores that Terracon took from each of the 3 piers. Two of the cores broke fairly close to the strength that the 28-day lab cured cylinders broke at (~4000 psi). The third cylinder broke at 2180 psi. I have no idea if the low break is a sign of thermal damage or possibly for some other reason (like the core being damaged when it was obtained).
I can't find much information on what to do when the concrete temperature is exceeded. I was expecting Terracon to inspect the samples under a microscope for signs of thermal damage but was not involved in the conversations with Terracon on what tests they would recommend for this situation. Should further inspection be required? Are there other tests that can be done to allow the concrete to remain? The structures have been installed on the piers so repairing or replacing them will start a battle. I have checked the structural capacity of the piers and even at 2000 psi concrete, there is not a structural concern provided the concrete isn't damaged.
I can't find much information on what to do when the concrete temperature is exceeded. I was expecting Terracon to inspect the samples under a microscope for signs of thermal damage but was not involved in the conversations with Terracon on what tests they would recommend for this situation. Should further inspection be required? Are there other tests that can be done to allow the concrete to remain? The structures have been installed on the piers so repairing or replacing them will start a battle. I have checked the structural capacity of the piers and even at 2000 psi concrete, there is not a structural concern provided the concrete isn't damaged.