mzaitz
Structural
- Sep 15, 2005
- 30
Hello all,
A mezzanine I looked at shows some major problems. The mezzanine is 4" total concrete on composite deck (though whether it is a composite deck is now suspect), supported by composite beams framing to noncomposite girders. According to the drawings there are #3@10" ew in top of the slab. If the field, you can see cracking in a square pattern that would be about 10" on center. In high traffic areas, where a lift truck is utilized, there are areas that the concrete has been reduced to rubble which is mainly the coarse aggregate, dust and the rebar. There is no cement paste sticking to the rebar or the aggregate. I suspected a chemical reaction and had cores taken and petragraphic and chemical tests done. The findings indicated a poor concrete with a w/c around 0.60 but no chemical reactions to explain the disintigration of the cement paste. A few articles I have read indicate there is an issue with concrete and soluble sugar. Anyone have any suggestions for more information on this? At the moment, we are looking at removing the concrete and leaving the existing deck in place and then pouring new concrete that does not utilize the deck other than as a form. The concern I have with this approach is that the deck and weld studs may have residue that could just start the same problem. Any ideas on this? We would like to leave the deck in place to minimize the issues with the space below. Anything we do will require that the ceiling plenum below and the area of work be cleaned to remove any sugar dust from the area. Being able to reuse the deck and weld studs would also minimize the amount of hot work in the area which is prefered.
Thanks,
Mike
A mezzanine I looked at shows some major problems. The mezzanine is 4" total concrete on composite deck (though whether it is a composite deck is now suspect), supported by composite beams framing to noncomposite girders. According to the drawings there are #3@10" ew in top of the slab. If the field, you can see cracking in a square pattern that would be about 10" on center. In high traffic areas, where a lift truck is utilized, there are areas that the concrete has been reduced to rubble which is mainly the coarse aggregate, dust and the rebar. There is no cement paste sticking to the rebar or the aggregate. I suspected a chemical reaction and had cores taken and petragraphic and chemical tests done. The findings indicated a poor concrete with a w/c around 0.60 but no chemical reactions to explain the disintigration of the cement paste. A few articles I have read indicate there is an issue with concrete and soluble sugar. Anyone have any suggestions for more information on this? At the moment, we are looking at removing the concrete and leaving the existing deck in place and then pouring new concrete that does not utilize the deck other than as a form. The concern I have with this approach is that the deck and weld studs may have residue that could just start the same problem. Any ideas on this? We would like to leave the deck in place to minimize the issues with the space below. Anything we do will require that the ceiling plenum below and the area of work be cleaned to remove any sugar dust from the area. Being able to reuse the deck and weld studs would also minimize the amount of hot work in the area which is prefered.
Thanks,
Mike