Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa)

In pursuit of reducing the dead-weight of precast concrete structures, one approach is by adopting lightweight concrete. EN 13369:2013 specifies a minimum cube compressive strength of at least 18 MPa for the lightweight concrete to be eligible for use in reinforced precast concrete products. This st...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Othman, M. L., Alsarayreh, A. I. M., Abdullah, R., Sarbini, N. N., Yassin, M. S., Ahmad,, H.
Format: Article
Published: Taylors Univ. Sdn. Bhd. 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/86886/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.utm.86886
record_format eprints
spelling my.utm.868862020-10-22T04:10:31Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/86886/ Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa) Othman, M. L. Alsarayreh, A. I. M. Abdullah, R. Sarbini, N. N. Yassin, M. S. Ahmad,, H. TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) In pursuit of reducing the dead-weight of precast concrete structures, one approach is by adopting lightweight concrete. EN 13369:2013 specifies a minimum cube compressive strength of at least 18 MPa for the lightweight concrete to be eligible for use in reinforced precast concrete products. This study conducts an experiment using LECA and EPA to produce lightweight concrete for structural use. Density, concrete quality, and strength of various mixes are observed by conducting cube compressive test and UPV test. Two phases of experiments were conducted, where the first phase variable is the percentage of LECA replacing the normal coarse aggregate, while the second phase variable is the percentage of EPA replacing the sand proportion. The optimum concrete mix is found to be the mix with 60% LECA and 50% EPA replacements, which achieved D1.8 lightweight density category that surpasses the specified minimum cube compressive strength and falls under the good quality concrete type according to the UPV rating. In summary, the inclusion of LECA and EPA into the concrete mix will decrease the cube compressive strength, lower the density, escalate the slump value and the travelling time of the ultrasonic pulse, but at the same time able to produce lightweight structural concrete. Taylors Univ. Sdn. Bhd. 2020-04 Article PeerReviewed Othman, M. L. and Alsarayreh, A. I. M. and Abdullah, R. and Sarbini, N. N. and Yassin, M. S. and Ahmad,, H. (2020) Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa). Journal of Engineering Science and Technology, 15 (2). pp. 1186-1201.
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
spellingShingle TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Othman, M. L.
Alsarayreh, A. I. M.
Abdullah, R.
Sarbini, N. N.
Yassin, M. S.
Ahmad,, H.
Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa)
description In pursuit of reducing the dead-weight of precast concrete structures, one approach is by adopting lightweight concrete. EN 13369:2013 specifies a minimum cube compressive strength of at least 18 MPa for the lightweight concrete to be eligible for use in reinforced precast concrete products. This study conducts an experiment using LECA and EPA to produce lightweight concrete for structural use. Density, concrete quality, and strength of various mixes are observed by conducting cube compressive test and UPV test. Two phases of experiments were conducted, where the first phase variable is the percentage of LECA replacing the normal coarse aggregate, while the second phase variable is the percentage of EPA replacing the sand proportion. The optimum concrete mix is found to be the mix with 60% LECA and 50% EPA replacements, which achieved D1.8 lightweight density category that surpasses the specified minimum cube compressive strength and falls under the good quality concrete type according to the UPV rating. In summary, the inclusion of LECA and EPA into the concrete mix will decrease the cube compressive strength, lower the density, escalate the slump value and the travelling time of the ultrasonic pulse, but at the same time able to produce lightweight structural concrete.
format Article
author Othman, M. L.
Alsarayreh, A. I. M.
Abdullah, R.
Sarbini, N. N.
Yassin, M. S.
Ahmad,, H.
author_facet Othman, M. L.
Alsarayreh, A. I. M.
Abdullah, R.
Sarbini, N. N.
Yassin, M. S.
Ahmad,, H.
author_sort Othman, M. L.
title Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa)
title_short Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa)
title_full Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa)
title_fullStr Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa)
title_full_unstemmed Experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa)
title_sort experimental study on lightweight concrete using lightweight expanded clay aggregate (leca) and expanded perlite aggregate (epa)
publisher Taylors Univ. Sdn. Bhd.
publishDate 2020
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/86886/
_version_ 1681489487823110144
score 13.18916