Influence of the molding process and different surface regularization methods on the compressive strength of concrete specimens

Authors

  • Lucas R. Lerner University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department
  • Maira J. Ott University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department
  • Lucas M. Führ University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department
  • Hinoel Z. Ehrenbring University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department
  • Fernanda Pacheco University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department
  • Bernardo F. Tutikian University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7764/RDLC.19.1.159-169

Keywords:

Concrete, Casting, Surface treatment, Compressive strength

Abstract

Concrete is one of the most important material for civil construction, given its high applicability. C Compressive strength (fc) is one of the main parameters to evaluate the concrete quality. Concrete of the same mixing volume may vary even with the same materials preparation. Concrete specimens molding, and its surface regularization contribute to these variations that are often hard to measure. Therefore, this paper aims to determine the variations in compressive strength of concrete, simulating different processes for casting, initial curing and surface treatment. In stage 1, the specimens were subjected to five surface treatment types, resulting in variations of 30% for concrete fc, whereas grinding specimens reached the highest 28-day compressive strength, so they were carried over to the next stage. In stage 2, specimens were produced as per ABNT NBR 5738 (2015) and with induced errors in casting and initial curing. The specimen produced according to the standard achieved the second-best result, whose 28-day fc was3% lower than that of the similar method, despite leaving the specimen uncovered for the first 24 hours after casting. Specimens produced in metal cylinder form works shows higher results than those produced in polyvinyl chloride molds (PVC).

 

 

Author Biographies

Lucas R. Lerner, University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department

 

 

 

Maira J. Ott, University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department

 

 

 

 

Lucas M. Führ, University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department

 

 

 

Hinoel Z. Ehrenbring, University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department

 

 

 

Fernanda Pacheco, University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department

 

 

 

Bernardo F. Tutikian, University of Vale do Rio dos Sinos/UNISINOS (Brazil). Civil Engineering Department

 

 

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Published

2020-04-30

How to Cite

Lerner, L. R., Ott, M. J., Führ, L. M., Ehrenbring, H. Z., Pacheco, F., & Tutikian, B. F. (2020). Influence of the molding process and different surface regularization methods on the compressive strength of concrete specimens. Revista De La Construcción. Journal of Construction, 19(1), 159–169. https://doi.org/10.7764/RDLC.19.1.159-169