jrfroe
Structural
- May 30, 2002
- 50
I have a unique situation that came up in the last week, that I'd appreciate some opinions on.
We have a wastewater tank that has bolted steel glass lined walls with a concrete floor. The slab was poured about a year ago, and there are several concrete spalls 1"-2" in diameter dispersed randomly across the tank floor with no obvious external cause. We had some cores taken of the concrete, including directly at a couple of the spalls, and the preliminary tests have found a small chunk of bentonite clay at the base of the spall. Concrete quality appears to be normal other than the clay.
We theorize that the concrete ready-mix plant was scaping the bottom of the aggregate pile and let some clay get into the mix.
The tank has an aeration grid installed across the slab, which complicates the placement of some sort of coating, but the aeration grid can be removed if needed. We are discussing recommending a poly-urea coating, but if water were able to find its way under the coating, say at the seal between the coating and the glass lined wall, and swell more of the bentonite, it could possibly delaminate the coating. I'm not too concerned with the structural capacity of the floor, since its primary function is water-tightness, although we do suspect that the perimeter ring-wall also has clay mixed in, but it would be well contained by reinforcement (except for the outer 2" clear cover). We suspect that the underside of the slab is also covered by random spalls as well.
Has anyone come across this problem before? What sort of things might I not be considering? Does anyone have any suggestions for repair of this problem or opinions on the effectiveness of a poly-urea coating?
Thanks in advance!
We have a wastewater tank that has bolted steel glass lined walls with a concrete floor. The slab was poured about a year ago, and there are several concrete spalls 1"-2" in diameter dispersed randomly across the tank floor with no obvious external cause. We had some cores taken of the concrete, including directly at a couple of the spalls, and the preliminary tests have found a small chunk of bentonite clay at the base of the spall. Concrete quality appears to be normal other than the clay.
We theorize that the concrete ready-mix plant was scaping the bottom of the aggregate pile and let some clay get into the mix.
The tank has an aeration grid installed across the slab, which complicates the placement of some sort of coating, but the aeration grid can be removed if needed. We are discussing recommending a poly-urea coating, but if water were able to find its way under the coating, say at the seal between the coating and the glass lined wall, and swell more of the bentonite, it could possibly delaminate the coating. I'm not too concerned with the structural capacity of the floor, since its primary function is water-tightness, although we do suspect that the perimeter ring-wall also has clay mixed in, but it would be well contained by reinforcement (except for the outer 2" clear cover). We suspect that the underside of the slab is also covered by random spalls as well.
Has anyone come across this problem before? What sort of things might I not be considering? Does anyone have any suggestions for repair of this problem or opinions on the effectiveness of a poly-urea coating?
Thanks in advance!