Relationship between Particle
Shape and Void Content of Fine Aggregate
Ufuk Dilek Ph.D., P.E., Senior Engineer
MACTEC Engineering and Consulting, Inc.
co-authored with M. L. Leming
ABSTRACT
Fine aggregate characteristics
have an important influence on water demand
and related properties of concrete. Several
test methods for measurement of fine aggregate
angularity are reported in the literature. These
tests typically provide a single number that
represents the bulk, or average angularity of
the sand. An understanding of the relationship
between bulk measures of angularity, individual
particle geometry and shape characteristics,
and concrete properties is important to aggregate
producers, concrete suppliers, consulting engineers,
other design professionals, particularly as
existing deposits of sand are consumed and alternate
sources must be developed. As part of a comprehensive
research program on manufactured sand properties
and their effects on fresh and hardened concrete
properties, an image analysis technique was
developed to determine the shape characteristics
by photographing and analyzing sets of individual
grains of sand. The outlines of the grains were
analyzed using a variety of geometrically derived
characteristics. The relationship between particle
shape characteristics and a common measure of
bulk angularity, void content (ASTM C 1252),
was then examined. Results of the study indicated
that void content was significantly influenced
by the presence of deep indentations in the
surface of the sand particle and deviations
from a cubical particle shape.
This
technical paper is availabe for purchase from
ASTM.org.
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