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Yield Stress and Viscosity

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Overview of ACI 238.1 R-08 Report on Measurements of Workability and Rheology of Fresh Concrete Chiara F. Ferraris, NIST USA
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Page 1: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Overview of ACI 238.1 R-08

Report on Measurements of Workability and Rheology of

Fresh Concrete

Chiara F. Ferraris, NIST USA

Page 2: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Importance

Fresh concrete properties are related to the properties of hardened concrete. Poor placement or consolidation leads to problems of durability and placement.Fresh concrete properties are not always properly measured or predicted.

Page 3: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Workability

that property of freshly mixed concrete or mortar that determines the ease with which it can be mixed, placed, consolidated, and finished to a homogenous condition.

Page 4: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Classes of workability measurement (Tattersall 1991)

Class I qualitativeWorkability, flowability,

compactability, finishability, pumpability, etc.

To be used only in a general descriptive way without any attempt to quantify

Class II quantitative empiricalslump, compacting factor, Vebe

time, flow table spread, etc.

To be used as a simple quantitative statement of behavior in a particular set of circumstances

Class III quantitative fundamentalviscosity, mobility, fluidity, yield

value, etc.

To be used strictly in conformity with standard definitions

Page 5: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Report ACI 238: Main Goal

How to select the proper test for the application at hand?How to interpret the results obtained to predict the performance of the concrete in the field in the fresh state?

Page 6: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Workable concrete

no flow (zero-slump) flow like a liquid (self-consolidating concrete [SCC])Anything in between

It depends on the application!!

Page 7: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Example of applications

Use of gyratory tester to measure workability of no-slump concreteUsing rheological measurements to solve problem with flooring groutsMeasuring batch-to-batch consistency of self-consolidating concreteTroubleshooting self-consolidating concrete mixtures

Page 8: Yield Stress and Viscosity

WorkabilitySlumpSlump flowStability staticFilling capacityPassing ability

ViscosityYield stress

Rheology

Torque

gapTorque

R1

R2

Page 9: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Definitions

Some concepts

Page 10: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Bingham Model

γττ &μ+= 0Yield Stress Plastic Viscosity

Shear StressShear rate

Yield stressSt

ress

Shear strain rate

Plastic Viscosity

Page 11: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Bingham model conceptSt

ress

Shear strain rate

Yield stress = Slump

Stre

ssShear strain rate

Plastic Viscosity

Same Yield Stress BUT

Different Plastic Viscosity

Same Plastic Viscosity BUT

Different Yield Stress

Page 12: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Dilatant/shear thickening

Shear rate

Bingham

Newtonian

Pseudoplastic/shear thinningSh

ear

stre

ssFlow Curves

Herschel-Buckley

Page 13: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Viscosity definition

i

ini γ

τη

&=

Stre

ss

Shear strain rate

iγ&

Page 14: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Non-Newtonian Viscosity

0102030405060708090

100

0 10 20 30 40 50

15 min85 min105 min125 min

Shear stress (1/s)

Non

-New

toni

an V

isco

sity

(Pa.

s)i

ini γ

τη

&=

Amziane S., Ferraris C.F. “Cementitious Paste Setting Using Rheological and Pressure Measurements”, ACI Materials Journal, vol. 104 #2, 2007 pp. 137-145

Page 15: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Yield stressA critical shear stress value below which an ideal plastic or

viscoplastic material behaves like a solid (that is, will not flow).

Once the yield stress is exceeded, a plastic material yields (deforms plastically), while a viscoplastic material flows like a liquid.

Time

Stre

ss

B

A

Time

Stre

ss

B

AA=Yield stressB= related to viscosity

Stress Controlled

Shear rate

Page 16: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Yield stress

Time

Stre

ss AB

Time

Stre

ss

Time

Stre

ss AB

Yield stress is between A & B

B is taken as the yield stress as it is easily determined

A=Yield stressB= related to viscosity

Stre

ss

Shear rate

B

A* *

****

Stre

ss

Shear rate

B

A* *

****

Shear rate

B

A* *

****

Stress Growth

Bingham

Page 17: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Segregation

BleedingSegregationSeparationStability – stability, dynamic– stability, static

AggregateWater

Cement/particles

Page 18: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Segregation - Rheology

Yield stress and viscosity

Yield stress > Weight of aggregateAggregate stable

Yield stress < weight of aggregateSedimentation

Depends on viscosity how fast the aggregate will settle

Page 19: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Consolidation From SCC to no-slump concrete

SCC: – low yield stress

• Flow on its own weight– high viscosity

• Cohesion, avoid segregation

No-slump concrete:– High yield stress

• Vibration reduced yield stress– Viscosity

Page 20: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Finishingleveling, smoothing, consolidating, andotherwise treating surfaces of fresh or

recently placed concrete or mortar to produce desired appearance and service.

No standard tests; Related toThe viscosity of the paste?Bleeding (yield stress/viscosity of bulk)?

Page 21: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Consistencythe degree to which a freshly mixed concrete, mortar, grout, or cement paste resists deformation

– Normal: Meets requirements for application– Plastic: deformation would be sustained

continuously in any direction without rupture.– wettest stable: maximum water content at

which cement grout and mortar will adhere to a vertical surface without sloughing.

Page 22: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Outline of reportChapter 1 —IntroductionChapter 2 —Rheological terms related to concreteChapter 3 —Test methods, (Koehler)

Chapter 4 —Factors affecting workability of concrete, (Billberg)

Chapter 5 —Examples of using workability test methods (Daczko, Khayat)

Page 23: Yield Stress and Viscosity

Acknowledgements

All members of ACI 238– Former ACI 236A


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