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Influence Of Test Conditions On Water Permeability Of Concrete In aTriaxial Cell

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2011

R. Doug Hooton
Affiliation:
Ontario Hydro, 800 Kipling Ave., Toronto, Ontario M8Z 5S4, Canada
Lillian D. Wakeley
Affiliation:
U.S. Army Waterways Experiment Station, P.O. Box 631, Vicksburg, Mississippi 39181–0631USA
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Abstract

The hydraulic conductivity of three concretes with a high ratio of water to cementitious solids (w/cs) was measured using a test device in which confining and driving pressures are controlled separately (triaxial, or Hassler cell). Test variables included: confining pressure (c), driving pressure (d), ratio of these two pressures (c/d), and sample length. The objective was to determine the effect of these variables on measured permeability (K).

For these concretes, the driving pressure has a strong influence on K values, which generally are significantly higher at lower driving pressures. The c/d ratio controls K to a lesser extent, and not in a consistent direction. K increases as c/d increases for specimen lengths of 3X the maximum aggregate size or longer. For specimens the length of which is closer to the aggregate size, K values decrease with increasing c/d, making specimen length an important variable. Removal of entrapped air from the system and presaturation of the specimens also are important.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1989

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References

1. Hooton, R. D., Proceedings, of the Engineering Foundation Conference on Advances in Cement Manufacture and Use (Aug. 1988).Google Scholar
2. Hooton, R. D., Proceedings of the Materials Research Society Symposium on Pore Structure and Permeability of Cementitious Materials (Nov. 1988).Google Scholar
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4. Whiting, D., Permeability of Concrete, Amer. Conc. Inst. SP-108, 195 (1988).Google Scholar