About: Roller-compacted concrete is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1266 publications have been published within this topic receiving 11329 citations. The topic is also known as: RCC & rolled concrete.
TL;DR: In this article, a reference book on concrete technology covers the fundamentals and detailed information on freshly mixed and hardened concrete for Canada The properties of concrete as needed in concrete construction are presented, including strength and durability All concrete ingredients are reviewed for their optimal use in designing and proportioning concrete mixtures.
Abstract: This updated, definitive reference book on concrete technology covers the fundamentals and detailed information on freshly mixed and hardened concrete for Canada The properties of concrete as needed in concrete construction are presented, including strength and durability All concrete ingredients are reviewed for their optimal use in designing and proportioning concrete mixtures Applicable standards from the American Society for Testing and Materials, Canadian Standards Association and American Concrete Institute are referred to extensively Individual chapters address: (1) fundamentals of concrete; (2) Portland, blended and other hydraulic cements; (3) fly ash, slag, silica fume and natural pozzolans; (4) mixing water; (5) aggregates for concrete; (6) admixtures for concrete; (7) fibers; (8) air-entrained concrete; (9) designing and proportioning normal concrete mixtures; (10) batching, mixing, transporting and handling concrete; (11) placing and finishing concrete; (12) curing concrete; (13) hot weather concreting; (14) cold-weather concreting; (15) volume changes of concrete; (16) control tests for concrete; (17) high-performance concrete; and (18) special types of concrete
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the use of coal ash in concrete to replace sand with bottom ash waste and cement with fly ash and concluded that those experimental concrete mixes can be used in several structures (foundations, subbases, pavements, etc.) which will minimize the cost, energy and environmental problems to a great extent.
TL;DR: In this paper, the strength properties of high-volume fly ash (HVFA) roller compacted and superplasticised workable concrete cured at moist and dry curing conditions were evaluated.
TL;DR: In this article, the use of recycled steel fibres as fatigue reinforcement for concrete pavements was examined based on an experimental investigation, where concrete prisms were subjected to cyclic third-point flexural loads at a frequency of 15 Hz, at maximum stress levels of 0.5, 0.7 and 0.9.