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shrinkage of slabs
shrinkage of slabs
does anyone know of typical values for shrinkage coefficeient? my computer model is asking me for it. it doesn't seem to tie in with bs8110 which i would use values of shrinkage strain to determine deflections from if doing by hand. presumably you mean the coefficient of thermal expansion for shrinkage. try googling it for the slab material you have. corus shrinkage of concrete is related to: average humidity longterm compressive strain (prestress) volume to surface ratio temperature during construction type of curing a good resource for volume change is the pci design handbook. for a typical interior 4" floor slab, a volume change of 420 millionths can be expected (about 1/4" over 50'). the bigger issue is usually slab curling due to uneven shrinkage of the top surface vs bottom. as teguci said, and also: aggregate type sand grading cement type / amount water/cement ratio additives and cement replacements as3600 (austr.) recommends using 850 x 10-6 for normal class cement, unless shown otherwise by testing. herewegothen, bs8110 part 2 defines a method of calculatiung the final in-service shrinkage you can expect for a teguci, linear length change due to sustained load (compressive or tensile) is creep, not shrinkage. the phenomena for creep and shrinkage are similar, but not inclusive, and both are dependent significantly on time and environmental conditions. aci209 provides guidelines for estimating creep and shrinkage for simple applications. patrick ciria guidance document c660 gives guidance in addition to providing spreadsheets for calculating expected shrinkage and early age thermal movement. ciria is the way to go. i got this graph from someone on here a while back. i'm not sure where it's from, but check it out. additionally, aci has something on this as well that accounts for aggregate type, etc, but i can't remember where it is. i'll look for it again. i'm re |
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