This research work is aimed at determining the effect of saturation of cement on the stability and compressive strength of concrete. Three different mix ratios were considered: 1:11/2:3, 1:2:4 and 1:3:6; alongside three different water - cement ratios: 0.55, 0.60 and 0.65. The key concrete characteristics checked for were stability, workability and compressive strength. Results indicate that mix ratio 1:11/2:3 produced a high workability for the three cement ratios considered, mix ratio 1:2:4 produced a low workability for water cement ratio 0.55 and 0.60 and a high workability for 0.65; while for mix ratio 1:3:6, a dry mix was produced for the three water cement ratios considered, thereby requiring additional water which eventually gave a low workability. The compressive strength results indicate that the mix with the highest values of strength were 1:11/2:3 at water - cement ratio of 0.55 with a strength of 29.3N/mm2after 28 days and 1:2:4 at water - cement ratio of 0.55 and strength of 26.4N/mm2 after 28 days. The mixes with the least strength are 1:3:6 at water - cement ratio of 0.65 having a strength of 13.6N/mm2 after 28 days, and 1:3:6 at water - cement ratio of 0.60 with strength of 13.3N/mm2 after 28 days. The deduction is also made that for the three mix ratios considered, the most suitable water - cement ratio is 0.55 based on stability and compressive strength.
CITATION STYLE
Odumade, A. O., Ezeah, C., & Ugwu, O. O. (2019). Cement saturation and the effect on stability and compressive strength of concrete. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 1299). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/1299/1/012013
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