sitepro
Civil/Environmental
- Apr 24, 2004
- 1
Recently we poured approximately 12,000 sf of slab. We used standard 3000 psi plant mix with 2% calcium added in pellet form (looks like styrofoam balls) in bags at the site. Therye was no monitoring of the temperature of the mix nor of the mix time for the calcium. The next morning when we cut control joints there was some places where the concrete flaked under the wheels of the saw ( approx 40 LF). Approximately two weeks later we noticed that there were several spots on the slab that were pitted about a quater of an inch square and flaked out to about two inches square. The problem areas accounted for about 1/10th of the slab or less.
Quality control from the concrete company had the suppliers engineer visit the site. His opinion was that the slab had frozen and that this was surface scaling and had nothing to do with the mix.
My argument was that I believed that some of the calcium balls had not totally disolved and that the pits were caused by heat from the calcium after placement. It was three days after pouring that the slab could have frozen and four days until the first rain.
Is it reasonably possible that the calcium not being completely dissolved could have caused this.
Thanks for your time
sitepro
Quality control from the concrete company had the suppliers engineer visit the site. His opinion was that the slab had frozen and that this was surface scaling and had nothing to do with the mix.
My argument was that I believed that some of the calcium balls had not totally disolved and that the pits were caused by heat from the calcium after placement. It was three days after pouring that the slab could have frozen and four days until the first rain.
Is it reasonably possible that the calcium not being completely dissolved could have caused this.
Thanks for your time
sitepro