Is549 Evaluation of Alkali Silica Reactivity (Asr) Mortar Bar Testing (Astm c1260 and c1567) at 14 Days and 28 Days
Is549 Evaluation of Alkali Silica Reactivity (Asr) Mortar Bar Testing (Astm c1260 and c1567) at 14 Days and 28 Days
Is549 Evaluation of Alkali Silica Reactivity (Asr) Mortar Bar Testing (Astm c1260 and c1567) at 14 Days and 28 Days
Figure 1. Comparison of 2-year expansion in ASTM C1293 concrete prism test (CPT) with expansion of
the same SCM-aggregate combinations in the (a) standard ASTM C1260/C1567/AMBT tests at 14 days
and (b) non-standard 28-day test (Thomas et al. 2007).
tests (i.e. both tests pass or both fail) are in agreement
about 77% of the time. Only about 7% of the time did
the results of the AMBT test pass aggregates that failed
subsequent CPT testing. In about 16% of the cases the
AMBT failed aggregate that passed subsequent CPT
testingcases in which the AMBT is over-conservative.
Table 1. Summary of ASTM C1293 and Standard ASTM C1260/C1567 Results (Thomas et al. 2007)
ASTM C1293 Concrete Prism Test
Passed ( 0.04%)
62
29
13
78
Table 2. Summary of C1293 and Non-Standard (28-d) Accelerated Mortar Bar Test Results (Thomas et al. 2007)
ASTM C1293 Concrete Prism Test
Passed ( 0.04%)
23
57
60
2
Evaluation of Alkali Silica Reactivity (ASR) Mortar Bar Testing (ASTM C1260 and C1567) at 14 days and 28 days
Figure 2. Estimated minimum level of SCM required to suppress 2-year expansion in ASTM C1293
concrete prism test (CPT) compared with level required to suppress expansion in a) standard ASTM
C1260/C1567/AMBT tests at 14 days and b) non-standard 28-day testing (Thomas et al. 2007).
comparison of the non-standard 28-day AMBT with
CPT results (the AMBT was not extended to 28 days
for all of the cases discussed above). In this case, there
is agreement between the two tests (both pass or both
fail) only about 58% of the time. Furthermore, in about
40% of cases the non-standard 28-day test predicted
failure of an SCM-aggregate combination that
performed satisfactorily in the concrete prism test.
Figure 2 compares the amount of SCM required to control expansion in the CPT test with portland cementSCM-aggregate combinations, with the amount required
for the same materials tested in both a) the standard
AMBT (14 days) and b) the non-standard (28-day) test.
There is generally good agreement between concrete
and mortar tests when a 14-day test is used. However,
using a 28-day result yields significantly higher amounts
of SCM being required to mitigate ASR: On average
the level of SCM required using 28-day results is 150%
higher than that required in CPT testing, which is a
significant disparity between results. This is inefficient
from an engineering perspective as high amounts of
SCMs can change the performance of concrete.
Evaluation of Alkali Silica Reactivity (ASR) Mortar Bar Testing (ASTM C1260 and C1567) at 14 days and 28 days
References:
ACI Committee 221 (ACI), State-of-the-Art Report on
Alkali-Aggregate Reactivity, ACI221.1R-98,
American Concrete Institute, Farmington Hills,
Michigan, 1998, reapproved 2008.
IS549.02