Control de Calidad de los Pavimentos de Hormigón
Transcription
Control de Calidad de los Pavimentos de Hormigón
Control de Calidad de los Pavimentos de Hormigón Mark Snyder Quality Control of Concrete Paving International Seminar on Concrete Pavements: Improving the Quality of Concrete Pavements Viña del Mar, Chile September 3-4, 2013 Mark B. Snyder, Ph.D., P.E. International Society for Concrete Pavements What is Construction Quality? • Achieving quality equates to conformance to requirements • Requirements need to be well-defined, measurable, and not arbitrary • Quality must be built into a project. It is not a “hit-or-miss” proposition. 3 How Do The Following People Affect “Quality”? o o o o o o o o Designer/Specifier Agency Inspector QC Technician Loader Operator at the concrete plant Truck Driver Paver Operator Concrete Finisher Texture/Cure Machine Operator Quality Measurement Tools • Two principal tools used to measure conformance with requirements: Inspection Testing Inspection • Equipment • Environmental Conditions • Materials • Product Workmanship Testing • Three criteria: Quality Characteristics (What do we want?) Quality Measures (How do I measure it?) Quality Limits (How much is enough?) How Much Quality Is Enough? • Is 99.9% “good enough”? 45 minutes of unsafe drinking water every month 2 long or short landings at many American airport each day 500 incorrect surgical operations each week 3,000 newborns accidentally falling from the hands of nurses or doctors each year 22,000 checks deducted from the wrong bank account each hour QA Principles • Types of Tests Process Control Test Not Random Contractors use when needed –Change in process or material Independent Assurance Not the project personnel Random Samples For compliance with specifications No others count for compliance Basis for Testing • Random testing assumes that the results are normally distributed • The mean and standard deviation of test results are used to determine if the samples are within specified limits • Variability is due to the operator (and equipment), the test procedure, and the material being tested Quality vs. Construction Variability • Variability is an inherent part of construction. Many sources • All sources of variability have a negative impact on the property being measured. • Need to understand the magnitude of the different sources of variability • Quality construction requires control over all sources of variability. Source: Shiraz Tayabji, Fugro Consultants, Inc. QA Principles N=1 • Sources of Variability Material Sampling Tester Equipment Procedures Sources of Variability Material Process Sampling Composite Variability Testing Precision and Bias • Established test procedures (ASTM, AASHTO) have accounted for test variability through precision and bias statements • All physical tests have built in variability that must be accounted for in some manner • The following slide illustrates the problem in determining a “right answer” Precision and Bias REASONABLE LEVELS OF VARIABILITY (In terms of acceptable standard deviation) • Subgrade Density: 1 to 3 lb/cu. ft • Concrete Thickness: 0.25 to 0.50 in. • Concrete Flex Strength: 40 to 60 psi • Concrete f’c: 300 to 500 psi 16 Higher levels of variability =>> construction process is not under control and/or testing procedures are marginal 17 Quality Control (QC) • QC generally refers to testing by the contractor for the purpose of process control and to ensure meeting or exceeding specifications • A comprehensive QC program is much more involved than QA because all aspects of the project must be proactively monitored (materials, batching, placement, etc.) Quality Control • Contractor’s QC system should address: Materials production processes Materials transportation and handling Field placement procedures Calibration and maintenance of equipment Watching the process Fixing the process Quality Control Charts • Quality control charts (QCC) are statistically based and used primarily for process control • Graphical format of QCC provides a simple and effective means to determine when a specific process is trending out of limits Statistical Process Control Concrete Batching QC • Uniformity between concrete batches is critical in producing a smooth and longlasting pavement • The following parameters are routinely checked during batching: Aggregate moisture Water content Water/cementitious materials ratio • Plant calibration and continuous monitoring are required ASTM Batching Tolerances Construction Operations QC Construction operations require many varied types of QC measures, including the following: • Concrete temperature at time of placement • Entrained air content • Consolidation (internal vibration) • Dowel bar placement • Potential for many others depending on specification requirements Testing – Temperature • ASTM C1064 • EASY, just place thermometer in concrete • Results help verify conformance to requirements Testing – Slump • ASTM C143 / AASHTO T119 • Measures consistency; NOT QUALITY! • Typical values: Slipform: 0.5-1.5 in. Fixed form: 3-4 in. • Slump is dependent on mixture and also on time of testing Testing – Density (Unit Weight) • • • • • ASTM C138 / AASHTO T121 Measures known volume Typically 130 to 150 lb/ft3 Indicates batch-to-batch variability Reduction in density may indicate: Higher air content, higher water content, lower cement content, change in proportions of ingredients, or change in aggregate specific gravity or moisture • One of the most valuable tests for process control Testing – Air Content • ASTM C231 / AASHTO T152 • Target air depends on agg size • Testing at plant or in front of paver doesn’t account for air loss of up to 2% in paver • Quality critical to durability • AVA and petrography are other means to measure Max Agg Size Target Air 9.5mm 7 ½% 13mm. 7% 19mm 6% 25mm 6% 38mm 5 ½% Testing – Air Content (continued) • Affected in the field by: Cement SCMs Chemical admixtures Gradation of aggregates w/cm ratio Temperature Delays Placement/consolidation Air Content • Why important? • Does not address aggregate durability problems • Typically specified as a target value and range (e.g., 5.0% 1.0%) Nonfreeze states: 1-6% Freeze states: 4-8% Quality Assurance (QA) • QA typically involves testing by the agency or its representative to determine compliance with specifications • The most frequently used QA criteria for paving jobs include Slab thickness Concrete strength Entrained air content Ride quality Acceptance Testing • Intent of testing is not to discriminate absolutely between good and bad end product Otherwise, we would be testing every cy of concrete and every sy of the pavement • Intent is to discriminate sufficiently to minimize Contractor’s risk of good end product being rejected Owner’s risk of a bad end product being accepted • Balance is maintained by type & extent of testing and rules used to accept test results Source: Shiraz Tayabji, Fugro Consultants, Inc. Qualifications • QC/QA personnel must be adequately trained (and, often, certified) • Repeatability and reproducibility of results are critical for both QC and QA functions Key Concrete Pavement Acceptance Items • • • • Air content Slab thickness Concrete strength Initial smoothness Thickness • Probe • Probe • Probe Slab Thickness • Why important? • Traditional method: Cores at prescribed locations Governed by ASTM C174 • NDT methods: GPR (limitations) Impact echo Slab Thickness Measuring: Magnetic Imaging Tomography Concrete Strength • Why important? • Traditional measurement methods Flexural strength of beams Compressive strength of cylinders or cores Split tensile testing of cylinders or cores Flexural, Compressive Strength • Strength testing of concrete is one of the most common tests performed • It is usually a combination of field preparation and laboratory (or mobile laboratory) testing • Relatively simple, but variability in results can often be attributed to slight variations in procedure Testing – Comp & Flex Strength • ASTM C39 / AASHTO T22 for cylinders • ASTM C78 / AASHTO T97 for beams • Typical strength requirements (low / avg / high) Compressive: 21 / 24.5 / 28 MPa Flexural: 3.8 / 4.2 / 4.5 MPa Concrete Strength Testing: Traditional Measurement Methods Cylinders Beams Cores Concrete Strength: Type Used for Acceptance Number of States 20 15 3-day 7-day 14-day 28-day Unknown 10 5 0 Compressive Flexural Concrete Strength: Specifying Strength • Strength type (flex, comp, split tensile) • Time of measurement (3, 7, 14, 28 days) • Strength value (average or minimum) • Typical*: Avg f’c = 28 MPa at 28 days Min f’c = 24 MPa at 28 days *ACPA Database of State Practices (2007) Concrete Strength: Alternative Methods • Maturity (ASTM C1074) Monitoring in-place concrete pavement temperatures to estimate strength • Pulse velocity (ASTM C597) Measuring speed at which ultrasonic waves travel through concrete • Seismic pavement analyzer Measuring resonant frequency of stress waves imparted in concrete Concrete Strength: Compressive Strength (MPa) • Strength of concrete = f(time, temp) • Laboratory-derived correlation curve • Monitoring of field 40 pavement temps 35 • Precision to 30 cylinders: ±5% 25 • Governed by 20 ASTM C 1074 15 5000 4000 3000 2000 10 1000 5 0 0 0 100 200 300 400 500 Temperature-Time Factor, M(t) Compressive Strength (psi) Maturity Testing – Maturity Testing – Maturity ASTM C1074 / AASHTO T325 Testing – Maturity Maturity Testing • • • • Early sawing Surface texturing Compatible equipment Equipment condition Initial Smoothness • Why important? • Measurement methods Straight edge Profilograph (California) Lightweight profilers • Typically expressed in terms of: Profile Index 5-mm blanking band (typ. 0.08 – 0.16 m/km) 0-mm blanking band: (typ. 0.32 – 0.47 m/km) IRI (typ. 0.95 – 1.10 m/km) Initial Smoothness: Measurement Methods California Profilograph Lightweight Profiler Current Smoothness Issues • Accuracy Wavelengths (profilograph) Tining, joints, cracks • Repeatability of device Tining, joints, cracks Coarse textured pavements These are current topics of research… Specification Incentives/Disincentives Number of States 30 25 20 Incentives Disincentives None 15 10 5 0 Strength Thickness Smoothness Summary • Key specification acceptance items Strength Thickness Air content Smoothness • Conventional test methods well established • New and innovative test methods evolving Rapid Nondestructive More test points Acknowledgments • U.S. Federal Highway Administration Concrete Pavement Technology Program • CTL Group, Inc. • U.S. National Highway Institute • American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) • American Concrete Pavement Association • Iowa State University National Concrete Pavement Technology Center Questions?