3.9 Article

A practical heat of hydration model for concrete curing for geotechnical applications

Journal

GEOTECHNICAL RESEARCH
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 23-31

Publisher

ICE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1680/jgere.21.00054

Keywords

concrete heat of hydration; geotechnical engineering; piles; thermal integrity profiling

Funding

  1. Imperial College President's PhD Scholarship
  2. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) [EP/R512540/1]

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This paper proposes a practical technique to calibrate a concrete heat of hydration model and validates its accuracy and feasibility through experiments and field measurements.
Thermal integrity profiling (TIP) is a common non-destructive technique to evaluate the quality of construction of piles by analysing the temperature fields due to heat of hydration from freshly cast concrete piles. For this process to be accurate, a reliable concrete heat of hydration model is required. This paper proposes a practical and simple technique to calibrate a four-parameter model for the prediction of concrete heat of hydration. This model has been shown to be able to reproduce the evolution of heat of hydration measured in laboratory tests, as well as field measurements of temperature within curing concrete piles, as part of a TIP operation performed at a site in London. With the simplicity of the model and the small number of model parameters involved, this model can be easily and quickly calibrated, enabling quick predictions of expected temperatures for subsequent casts using the same concrete mix.

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