Steam Curing of Portland Cement Concrete at Atmospheric Pressure, HR-40, 1962


Autoria(s): Desconhecido
Data(s)

01/01/1962

Resumo

The primary reason for using steam in the curing of concrete is to produce a high early strength. This high early strength is very desirable to the manufacturers of precast and prestressed concrete units, which often require expensive forms or stress beds. They want to remove the forms and move the units to storage yards as soon as possible. The minimum time between casting and moving the units is usually governed by the strength of the concrete. Steam curing accelerates the gain in strength at early ages, but the uncontrolled use of steam may seriously affect the growth in strength at later ages. The research described in this report was prompted by the need to establish realistic controls and specifications for the steam curing of pretensioned, prestressed concrete bridge beams and concrete culvert pipe manufactured in central plants. The complete project encompasses a series of laboratory and field investigations conducted over a period of approximately three years.

Formato

pdf

Identificador

http://publications.iowa.gov/17299/1/IADOT_hr40_Steam_Curing_PCC_Atmospheric_Pressure_1962.pdf

(1962) Steam Curing of Portland Cement Concrete at Atmospheric Pressure, HR-40, 1962. Transportation, Department of

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://publications.iowa.gov/17299/

Palavras-Chave #Pavements #Transportation #Bridges and tunnels #Research #Concrete #Design and Construction
Tipo

Departmental Report

NonPeerReviewed