Types of Joint in concrete construction:
Joints in concrete building construction are construction
joints, expansion joints, contraction joints and
isolation joints. They prevent cracking of concrete. Types of joints in
concrete are described below:
Construction
Joints:
Construction joints are placed in a concrete
slab to define the extent of the individual placements, generally in conformity
with a predetermined joint layout. They must be designed in order to allow
displacements between both sides of the slab but, at the same time, they have
to transfer flexural stresses produced in the slab by external loads. Construction
joints must allow horizontal displacement right-angled to the joint surface
that is normally caused by thermal and shrinkage movement. At the same time
they must not allow vertical or rotational displacements. Figure 1 summarizes
which displacement must be allowed or not allowed by a construction joint.
Expansion joint:
The concrete is subjected to
volume change due to many reasons. So we have to cater for this by way of joint
to relieve the stress. Expansion is a function of length. The building longer
than 45m are generally provided with one or more expansion joint. In india
recommended c/c spacing is 30m. The joints are formed by providing a gap
between the building parts.
Contraction Joints:
A contraction joint
is a sawed, formed, or tooled groove in a concrete slab that creates a weakened
vertical plane. It regulates the location of the cracking caused by dimensional
changes in the slab. Unregulated cracks can grow and result in an unacceptably
rough surface as well as water infiltration into the base, subbase and
subgrade, which can enable other types
of pavement distress. Contraction joints are the most common type of joint in
concrete pavements, thus the generic term “joint” generally refers to a contraction
joint. Contraction joints are chiefly defined by their spacing and their method
of load transfer. They are generally between 1/4 – 1/3 the depth of the slab
and typically spaced every 3.1 – 15 m
Isolation Joints
Joints
that isolate the slab from a wall, column or drainpipe
Isolation joints have
one very simple purpose—they completely isolate the slab from something else.
That something else can be a wall or a column or a drain pipe. Here are a few
things to consider with isolation joints:
- Walls and columns, which are on their own footings that are deeper
than the slab subgrade, are not going to move the same way a slab does as it
shrinks or expands from drying or temperature changes or as the subgrade
compresses a little.
Even wooden columns should be isolated from the
slab.
- If
slabs are connected to walls or columns or pipes, as they contract or
settle there will be restraint, which usually cracks the slab—although it
could also damage pipes (standpipes or floor drains).
- Expansion
joints are virtually never needed with interior slabs, because the
concrete doesn’t expand that much—it never gets that hot.
- Expansion
joints in concrete pavement are also seldom needed, since the contraction
joints open enough (from drying shrinkage) to account for temperature
expansion. The exception might be where a pavement or parking lot are next
to a bridge or building—then we simply use a slightly wider isolation
joint (maybe ¾ inch instead of ½ inch).
- Blowups,
from expansion of concrete due to hot weather and sun, are more commonly
caused by contraction joints that are not sealed and that then fill up
with non-compressible materials (rocks, dirt). They can also be due to
very long unjointed sections.
Very long unjointed sections can expand enough
from the hot sun to cause blowups, but this is rare.
- Isolation joints are formed by placing preformed joint material
next to the column or wall or standpipe prior to pouring the slab. Isolation
joint material is typically asphalt-impregnated fiberboard, although plastic,
cork, rubber, and neoprene are also available.
- Isolation joint material should go all the way through the slab,
starting at the subbase, but should not extend above the top.
- For a cleaner looking isolation joint, the top part of the
preformed filler can be cut off and the space filled with elastomeric sealant.
Some proprietary joints come with removable caps to form this sealant
reservoir.
- Joint materials range from inexpensive asphalt-impregnated
fiberboard to cork to closed cell neoprene. Cork can expand and contract with
the joint, does not extrude, and seals out water. Scott Whitelam with APS Cork
says that the required performance is what determines the choice of joint
materials. How much motion is expect, exposure to salts or chemicals, and the
value of the structure would all come into play—and of course the cost.
Polyethylene foam isolation joint material comes
in various colors. C2 Products
- At columns, contraction joints should approach from all four
directions ending at the isolation joint, which should have a circular or a
diamond shaped configuration around the column. For an I-beam type steel
column, a pinwheel configuration can work. Always place the slab concrete first
and do not install the isolation joint material and fill around the column
until the column is carrying its full dead
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