Experimental Evaluation of Compressive Properties of Early-Age Mortar and Concrete Hollow-Block Masonry Prisms within Construction Stages
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Compressive Properties of Masonry
3. Experimental Investigation of Compressive Properties of Early-Age Mortar Cubes
3.1. Test Setup for Evaluating Compressive Strength of Mortar Cube
3.2. Results and Discussions
4. Experimental Investigation of Compressive Properties of Early-Age Masonry Prisms
4.1. Test Setup for Comprehensive Tests of Masonry Prisms
4.2. Results and Discussions
5. Conclusions
- The variation in the results of early-age mortar cubes and masonry prism testing was considerable. Therefore, the number of tests should be greater than the minimum number of tests suggested in masonry codes. For example, CSA-A179 recommends a minimum of six samples for fully cured mortar cube compressive testing; however, this study suggested an average of 20 tests for each t to minimize COV (less than 20–25%). Moreover, the threshold of 50% difference from the average of the data, suggested in masonry codes, was not enough for the analysis of early-age masonry data. Therefore, outlier analysis was necessary, as it reduced the COV of some groups of data by over 80%.
- Based on regression analysis, the σ-ε behavior of mortar cubes regarding all t groups, as well as the regression models for σmc and Emc against t can be predicted for any t groups, which were even not addressed in the experimental study, with R2 of more than 0.95. σ-ε plot of t ≤ 18 h samples does not have any peak points. Therefore, this study suggested a threshold of 0.03 for ε as the failure of samples by adjusting the maximum usable ε for masonry elements in the ultimate limit state design method presented in masonry design codes. Moreover, the PE model was edited based on the output of this research. Only the parabolic part of the PE model should be used for the samples with t ≤ 18 h. However, the original PE model, including both parabolic and linear parts (regarding the ascending and descending parts of the σ-ε plot, respectively), can be applied for the analysis of samples older than 18 h.
- Emc and σmc increased logarithmically as t increased, and the developed regression models did not intersect the origin because mortar cubes tested at ages less than 20.8 h had not yet undergone their primary hydration phase and there was no cohesion to the mortar itself. In this case, the failure mode was more akin to a soil failure than the shear compression failure (conical shear pattern) associated with fully cured cementitious materials. For example, 24 h mortar obtains only ~5% of σmc of fully cured mortar. However, the failure mode of older mortar cubes (t > 20.8 h) was like the failure mode of fully cured mortar or concrete (conical shear failure mode) because of the formation of calcium silicate hydrate and calcium hydroxide.
- Like mortar cubes, the failure mode of masonry prisms depends on the hydration phase of the mortar. The failure mode of masonry prisms regarding t ≤ 20.8 h, when the primary hydration phase has not started yet, is determined by the failure of mortar, which is deformation and detachment. However, the failure mode of prisms after the start of the hydration phase (t > 20.8 h) depends on the failure mode of blocks. Based on the results, concrete blocks follow the failure modes presented in ASTM-C1314, including conical break, cone and shear, cone and split, tension break, semi-conical break, shear break, and face shell separation.
- Regarding the performance perspective, there was a practical limit to the compressive loads that could be resisted by the early-age masonry without detracting from the appearance and excessive smooshing of the mortar joint, which of course would be qualitative. For example, 18 h samples obtained only ~13% of their full compressive strength. However, regarding the life safety perspective, the compressive failure load for masonry prisms was independent from t.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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t (h) | ε Corresponding to the Inflection Points |
---|---|
3 | 0.005 |
4 | 0.007 |
6 | 0.014 |
13 | 0.009 |
18 | 0.010 |
24 | 0.015 |
48 | 0.014 |
72 | 0.017 |
168 | 0.012 |
672 | 0.0126 |
t (h) | N | Emc (kPa) | σmc (kPa) | εmc | a | b | c | d | R2 (Cubic) | R2 (Linear) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | 16 | 1.96 × 102 | 4.96 | 0.030 | −0.911 | 1.58 | - | - | 0.63 | - |
4 | 13 | 3.16 × 102 | 6.89 | 0.030 | −0.995 | 1.36 | - | - | 0.61 | - |
6 | 15 | 1.46 × 103 | 3.22 × 101 | 0.030 | −0.684 | 1.67 | - | - | 0.75 | - |
13 | 11 | 1.21 × 104 | 2.08 × 102 | 0.030 | −0.896 | 1.92 | - | - | 0.92 | - |
18 | 15 | 4.66 × 104 | 6.45 × 102 | 0.029 | −1.58 | 2.48 | - | - | 0.64 | - |
24 | 11 | 5.45 × 104 | 9.48 × 102 | 0.024 | −1.13 | 2.10 | −0.064 | 1.03 | 0.62 | 0.53 |
48 | 12 | 3.29 × 105 | 5.18 × 103 | 0.021 | −0.847 | 1.85 | −0.314 | 1.32 | 0.72 | 0.57 |
72 | 14 | 5.56 × 105 | 9.19 × 103 | 0.017 | −0.628 | 1.66 | −0.296 | 1.33 | 0.61 | 0.49 |
168 | 10 | 1.45 × 106 | 1.56 × 104 | 0.014 | −0.880 | 1.90 | −0.457 | 1.47 | 0.66 | 0.73 |
672 | 11 | 2.14 × 106 | 2.40 × 104 | 0.012 | −0.506 | 1.53 | −0.483 | 1.51 | 0.84 | 0.71 |
t (h) (COV%) | N | σm * (kPa) (COV%) | δm ** (mm) (COV%) | εm (COV%) | σ Corresponding to Displacement of 1.17 mm (kPa) | σ Corresponding to Displacement of 3 mm (kPa) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 (6.6%) | 10 | 1.16 × 104 (8.7%) | 1.15 × 101 (19.3%) | - | 3.81 × 102 | 1.27 × 103 |
18 (4.6%) | 5 | 1.10 × 104 (8.1%) | 1.07 × 101 (15.3%) | - | 1.60 × 103 | 4.10 × 103 |
168 (0.5%) | 10 | 1.15 × 104 (13.2%) | 1.36 (29.4%) | 0.003 (29.4%) | 1.15 × 104 | - |
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Abasi, A.; Banting, B.; Sadhu, A. Experimental Evaluation of Compressive Properties of Early-Age Mortar and Concrete Hollow-Block Masonry Prisms within Construction Stages. Materials 2024, 17, 3970. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17163970
Abasi A, Banting B, Sadhu A. Experimental Evaluation of Compressive Properties of Early-Age Mortar and Concrete Hollow-Block Masonry Prisms within Construction Stages. Materials. 2024; 17(16):3970. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17163970
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbasi, Ali, Bennett Banting, and Ayan Sadhu. 2024. "Experimental Evaluation of Compressive Properties of Early-Age Mortar and Concrete Hollow-Block Masonry Prisms within Construction Stages" Materials 17, no. 16: 3970. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17163970
APA StyleAbasi, A., Banting, B., & Sadhu, A. (2024). Experimental Evaluation of Compressive Properties of Early-Age Mortar and Concrete Hollow-Block Masonry Prisms within Construction Stages. Materials, 17(16), 3970. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17163970