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Workshop on Specifications and Producer QC

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Workshop on Specifications and Producer QC ... locating batching plant and constituent material problems and also monitoring the performance of individual testing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Workshop on Specifications and Producer QC


1
Workshop on Specifications and Producer QC Ken
Day
  • I shall start by spending a few minutes
    describing some provisions of the Australian Code
    before inviting your participation.
  • I will then make provocative statements about the
    effects of prescription and performance
    specifications, plant and project control,
    achievable variability, quality of testing, the
    analysis of data and financial benefits
  • I enjoy arguments, PLEASE OBLIGE!

2
Workshop on Specifications and Producer QC
  • Australian Code Requirements
  • AS1379 / DR05253www.standards.com.au

3
Specification of Concrete
  • Concrete shall be specified as either Normal
    class or Special class and by strength grade or
    other readily verifiable parameter
  • Standard grades
  • 20, 25, 32, 40, 50,/ 65, 80, 100 MPa
  • (202,900, 507,250 / 100 14,500psi)
  • 32MPa (4,640psi) is the minimum strength allowed
    to be specified for external reinf. concrete
  • Also max agg size, slump, method of placement,
    air entrainment are to be specified.

4
Other Standard Requirements(wide basic
requirements for all concrete)
  • Density 2100-2800kg/m (130-175lb/cu ft)
  • Acid soluble chloride and sulphate limits
  • Shrinkage (max 1000)
  • 7 day strength 50 of grade strength (up to N50)
  • Cement complying with AS3972 alone or plus one
    or more supplementary cementitious materials

5
Special Class Concrete
  • Still preferably uses strength grade can be
  • compressive, flexural or indirect tensile
  • One of 3 exposure classifications - which imposes
    limits on aggregate durability and class and type
    of cementitious material
  • gt50MPa (7,250psi) has to be special class
  • Can specify other requirements
  • in consultation with the supplier

6
Special Class Concrete
  • It is certainly allowed to specify tighter limits
    on shrinkage, low permeability, the use of fly
    ash, silica fume, or ggbfs etc.
  • This will usually restrict the range of producers
    prepared to supply to those having arrangements
    with particular material suppliers and suitable
    storage arrangements (extra bin?)
  • Other special class items could include
    self-compacting concrete, lightweight, very high
    early strengths, colour control, wear resistance,
    heat generation, shotcrete, underwater etc.

7
Assessment for Compliance
  • Tests at least 1 per 100cu m (133cu yd).
  • Assess at selected production interval from 2
    weeks to 3months (1 month usual)
  • One grade to be selected as control grade and
    to have at least 10 results per production
    interval (most have many more)
  • Variability of production to be assessed on basis
    of this grade

8
Compliance Requirements
  • The Characteristic Strength is that exceeded
    by 95 of results so
  • Mean 1.65SD (90 so -1.28SD in USA)
  • However it is recognised that there is an error
    in assessment so k in mean-kSD is varied
    according to number of samples in control grade
    from 3.2 for 4 samples to 1.5 for 10samples and
    1.25 for 15 or more samples (1.25 gives all error
    margin to producer, I do not agree with this)

9
Compliance Requirements
  • For associated grades the SD is scaled from
    that of the control grade using relative factors
  • lt20(2,900psi)-0.9,
  • 20-1.0,
  • 25-1.1,
  • 32-1.2,
  • 40-1.3,
  • 50 (7,250psi) -1.4
  • Note that these are far from assuming the same
    coefficient of variation applies,
    eg 40 _at_ 1.3 not 2x20 _at_1.0

10
Dissemination of Information
  • A long list of information is to be prepared at
    the end of each production interval and kept
    readily available for inspection
  • Customers can require relevant data to be
    submitted to them within 15 days
  • The supplier shall notify the relevant customers,
    within 2 working days, if a particular quantity
    of concrete is likely to be below the specified
    strength

11
Project Assessment
  • At least 1 sample per 50cu m
  • Moving average of 3 to exceed fc
  • Not much different to US, less likely to find any
    problem than the plant control

12
The Purpose of Testing Concrete
  • In 1958 I wrote
  • The only rational objective for any but 100
    testing is not to discover and reject faulty
    products but to ascertain the minimum quality
    level of the production
  • -Some ideas take a while to sink in!

13
The Purpose of Testing Concrete
  • More recently I have added a second objective of
    quality control
  • To detect at the earliest possible moment any
    change in the quality of concrete being supplied
  • The factors involved in such a detection are
  • the frequency of testing,
  • the basic variability of the concrete,
  • the analysis system in use.

14
Plant v Project Control
  1. It is far more efficient to ensure that no
    defective concrete is produced at a plant than to
    ensure that no defective concrete is delivered to
    a project because
  2. More data is available at less cost per cubic
    yard
  3. Problems can be detected and identified earlier
  4. Producers can react to a limited amount of early
    age test data but project control usually
    requires a significant number of 28 day results
    to demand action on marginally defective
    concrete.
  5. A limited number of standard mixes can be
    accurately maintained with data also on
    shrinkage, durability, fresh properties (slump,
    pumpability, bleeding) etc

15
DISCUSSION
  1. Prescription specifications provide no incentive
    for producers to know or care anything about
    designing or controlling concrete.
  2. As a consequence such specifications have to
    provide a very large safety margin to cover high
    variability and inefficient design and material
    selection.
  3. Since there is no incentive for the producer to
    employ competent staff, purchase good materials,
    and have good production facilities, it is
    necessary for all such matters to be specified in
    detail and to employ supervision to ensure
    compliance.
  4. Therefore prescription specification concrete is
    inevitably more expensive than producer-controlled
    performance concrete.

16
Variability of Concrete (COMMENTS?)
  1. Under good quality control, the SD of concrete
    strength should not exceed 450psi and can be as
    low as 300psi (achieved on concrete of 14,000psi
    mean strength on Petronas Towers)
  2. Under the UK QSRMC system a figure of 600psi is
    regarded as normal
  3. Without formal QC, 800 to 1000psi would not be
    surprising (what is yours?)
  4. Even under the relaxed US criterion of 10
    defective, each extra 100psi of SD requires a
    mean strength increase of 128psi and so at least
    20lb/cu yd additional cement

17
Testing of Concrete
  1. In a paper Bad Concrete or Bad Testing to ACI
    San Diego in 1989 I showed that individual tests
    can be inaccurate to the extent of over 1,000psi
    but that an analysed pattern of results was very
    reliable.
  2. A single test result is not an invariably
    accurate assessment of the quality of concrete in
    a single truck
  3. ALSO we should show as much concern for those
    trucks we did not test as for those we did

18
Testing of Concrete
  1. Best criterion of testing quality is average pair
    difference of 28day results.
  2. 75psi is best attainable, 150psi just OK,
    200psi is POOR
  3. Average strength of a pair is depressed by at
    least half the pair difference (more likely twice
    this)
  4. So sub-standard testing costs you money even
    without considering rejections and penalties
    (Prof Jurans Gold in the Mine)

19
Testing of Concrete
  1. Who does the best job of testing?
  2. In Australia a lab is required to be NATA
    registered. An independent lab must achieve
    registration but derived no benefit from
    additional quality since the lab was chosen by
    the main contractor in the 1970s
  3. Since higher testing quality meant a higher mean
    and lower variability, suppliers labs had more
    incentive to achieve a higher standard
  4. So, as an independent analyst and a NATA
    assessor, I found that suppliers labs generally
    achieved at least a slightly higher standard

20
Testing of Concrete Duplicate Testing
  1. When concrete producers began doing the main
    testing, specifiers were initially keen to have a
    proportion of check tests by independent labs
  2. It proved very inconclusive to test different
    trucks
  3. Duplicating tests by two lab teams on the same
    truck was more enlightening, but expensive
  4. Requiring producers sampling personnel to take a
    proportion of double samples and deliver half to
    an independent lab worked well
  5. Now, after years of experience of such checks,
    very few purchasers require independent checks

21
Conclusion on Producer Testing
  1. After 20 years of experience it is clear that it
    is worthwhile for any substantial producer to
    establish a high standard, officially certified,
    laboratory
  2. The laboratory and its test data and analysis
    records must be open to inspection by customers
    representatives at all times
  3. In these circumstances, plant control with
    producer testing is substantially more economical
    and reliable than project control

22
Physical and Financial Benefits
  1. It is clear that producer operated plant control
    results in better controlled, lower variability
    concrete at a lower real cost of production. So
    there is scope for everyone to benefit
  2. The question is how to get started specifiers
    probably happy to use plant control once it is
    seen to exist but producers have to provide it
    first?

23
Physical and Financial Benefits
  • 3) I suggest specifiers include an alternative
    clause waiving requirements such as minimum
    cement content and aggregate gradings where an
    approved system of plant control is in
    operation. They could initially be generous as
    to what is required for approval.
  • 4) Some US producers are already using plant
    control and will immediately benefit.
    Competition will ensure others follow.

24
Physical and Financial Benefits
  1. The initial benefit will be to those producers
    who first achieve low variability and so are more
    competitive
  2. As other producers catch up, the benefit is to
    the customers as competition reduces price
  3. There may be some tendency for takeovers as some
    small producers are unable to compete
  4. However small producers headed by technically
    competent persons can compete and may be able to
    react quicker than larger producers and gain an
    initial advantage (eg Don Bain at
    Maricopa)

25
Analysis of Data
  1. The efficient analysis of data is of as much
    significance as quality of testing
  2. It is to be judged by the rapidity of corrective
    action in terms of number of results needed to
    reach a decision
  3. Multigrade, Multivariable, Cusum analysis is 3 to
    10 times as fast as normal Shewhart graphing
  4. A semi-automatic mix correction system is also
    required for rapid response to give low
    variability

26
Analysis of Data
  1. Such analysis can be undertaken using the free
    programs on my website www.kenday.id.au
  2. There are far more elaborate systems (such as
    ConAd) giving greater insight into the causes of
    problems and more precise mix correction
  3. Such programs may also be of substantial value in
    production engineering matters, locating batching
    plant and constituent material problems and also
    monitoring the performance of individual testing
    personnel and truck drivers
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