Coarse and Fine Aggregate
Coarse and Fine Aggregate
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UTILIZATION OF STEEL INDUSTRY BYPRODUCTS OF BANGLADESH AS REPLACEMENT TO AGGREGATE IN CONCRETE View project
All content following this page was uploaded by Md. Shahrior Alam on 11 August 2020.
Presented by
Md. Shahrior Alam Dr. Syed Ishtiaq Ahmad.
Assistant Engineer Professor
Central Quality Control Unit Department of Civil Engineering
Local Government Engineering Bangladesh University of Engineering
Department (LGED) and Technology (BUET)
1
AGGREGATE SOURCE
Lubha Quarry
Jalpaiguri Jafflong Quarry
MAIN SOURCE
(Chawa and Karotoa Bholagong Quarry
river) Bhowal Quarry
Sari river Quarry
Rangamati
Mymensingh Sand
Cox’s Bazar
Netrakana Sand
St. martin island
2
Aggregate
Coarse aggregate shall be obtained from
breaking hard durable rock or gravel, 1st class
bricks or Picked Bricks. Coarse aggregate shall
be clean, free from dust and other materials. The
grading of the coarse aggregate shall be such
that when combined with the approved fine
aggregates, it shall produce a workable mixture of
maximum density.
3
Economic alternative of stone chips
4
Stone Aggregate Brick Aggregate
Aggregate
5
Fine Aggregate
Fine aggregate
6 Fine sand
White sand
Gradation of Aggregates
Gradation refers to the grain-size composition of a material or the
amount of various particle sizes
Well-graded materials have various amounts of larger and smaller
particles such that the voids between the larger particles can be filled
with smaller and smaller particles to make a tight, dense and stable
mass.
Poorly-graded or uniformly graded materials may have all the
particles of nearly same particle size, or some of the intermediate sizes
are missing, such that it does not meet the requirements of a well-
graded material.
Gap grading is a kind of grading which lacks one or more
intermediate size. Gap graded aggregates can make good concrete
when the required workability is relatively low.
7
Gradation of aggregates of Concrete work’s Specifications
are given below:
Grading for nominal size coarse aggregate shall comply with
the following ASTM C-33 standard gradations:
8
Sand shall be well graded from coarse to fine within
the limits given below (ASTM C-33 standard
gradations):
9
Sieve Analysis of Fine and Coarse Aggregates
10
Apparatus:
Suitable sizes of sieves for testing the soil: #4, #8, #16,
#30, #50, #100, #200
Brush for cleaning the sieves
1000 gms. capacity balance of 0.1 gm. sensitivity .
Oven for drying soil (1100c ± 50c)
Large pan for keeping soil
Wooden hammer for breaking soil clods.
Figure given at left side shows the arrangement of
sieves used for actual test. The arrangement is such
that the sieve with the largest opening is placed at the
top followed by next finer sieve and so on.
11
Sieve Analysis
12 A Set of Sieves
Procedure:
Dry the sample to constant weight at a temperature
110 0 ± 50 c;
Select with care a test sample representative of
the sand to be tested, break the Sand into its
individual particles with the fingers or wooden
hammer.
Weigh to 0.1 gm a specimen of approximately
100/500 gm of dried sand.
Clean the sieves and weigh each sieve to 0.1 gm.
Sieve the sand through a nest of sieves by hand
shaking using motion of horizontal rotations or by a
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mechanical shaker, if available.
Procedure:
14
Procedure
15
The sum of cumulative %weight retain on the
following sieve 80mm, 40mm, 20mm, 10mm, #4, #8,
#16, #30, #50 & #100 divided by 100
Fineness modulus (FM) =
Σ Cumulative % retained up to sieve #100/ 100
16
Sieve NO. Weight % Wt Cumulative % Passing
Retain Retain % Wt.
Retained Retained
#4 0 0 0 100
#8 0.5 0.25 0.25 100
#16 2.5 1.25 1.5 98
#30 17 8.5 10 90
#50 30 15 25 75
#100 100 50 75 25
#200 30 15 90 10
Pan 20 10
Cumulative % Wt. Retained up to Sieve #100 111.75
FM =(0.25+1.5+10+25+75)/100
=111.75/100
17 =1.12
Sieve Weight Cumulative weight Cumulative %
Sieve size
No retained(g) retained (g) retained (g)
- 80mm 0 0 0
F c - Fr
F r - Ff
Where, FC and Ff are the F.M. of coarse and fine
sand respectively and ‘Fr’ is the required or desired
F.M. of the mix.
19
While there is no specified grading, it may be desirable to
proportion the available material in such a way that the grading of
the combined aggregate is similar to the specified one. This can
be done by calculation or by graphically.
By Calculation (through Trial-and-Error)
P-A
b = ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (2)
B-A
P-B
An expression for ‘a ’ can also be found as a A-B
= ----------(3)
20
Example of Proportioning Two Aggregates by
Calculation
(Trial-and-Error)
Sieve
(mm, No.) 19 12.5 9.5 #4 #8 # 30 # 50 # 100 # 200
Specification 100 80-100 70-90 50-70 35-50 18-29 13-23 8-16 4-10
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b. First trial combination:
For sieve size (#8)
Total 100 95.0 79.5 56.0 42.6 26.1 18.0 10.5 4.6
Specification 100 80-100 70-90 50-70 35-50 18-29 13-23 8-16 4-10
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c. Second trial combination:
Total 100 95.5 81.6 60.0 46.5 28.5 19.8 11.5 5.1
Specification 100 80-100 70-90 50-70 35-50 18-29 13-23 8-16 4-10
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d. Third trial combination:
Passing (#30) sieve size is High, Let ‘b’ = 0.52, ‘a’ = 0.48
Total 100 95.2 80.3 57.6 44.1 27.0 18.7 10.9 4.8
Specification 100 80-100 70-90 50-70 35-50 18-29 13-23 8-16 4-10
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26 QCU 8/11/2020
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