The two biggest concerns of the job are not the design of the slab and jointing.
They are 1) Quality of the plants producing the concrete and 2) the quality of the aggregates available. The following is a bit of clarification depending on what I have seen in developing or re-developing countries. Much depends on the particular area of Iraq.
1. You could encounter a wide range of quality and quality control depending on the location and age of the facilities. In the major metropolitan areas you count encounter some very new high-tech plants and some very old and traditional limited plants. In the more remote areas, you could encounter almost any level of older plants unless there is a new plant supplied from the U.S. or Germany IF there is some spomsored rebuilding. The newer plants are what you would find in any western or developed middle esat country, but they may too new for there to be a reliable developed history of uniformity. It is important to know where the concrete will come from since there can be some political or military reasons.
2. The aggregate is a major problem. You specifications for aggregate may be meaningless if there are not the deposits OR the processing procedures and equipment to produce the aggregate. Just like new ready mix plants, the processing equipment can be flown in easily, but the aggregate desposit and the processing methods cannot be relocated. You may specify a specific aggregate, but it may be several hundred miles away and difficult to ship because of the roads, accessibility and distance. The specified aggregate could cost $100 to $200 per ton delivered to the site (I have seen this in Africa). After the logistics are established, I would concentrate on the soundness of the aggregate because of the temperature variations in part of the country. The most common problem will be be cleanliness and dust in the aggregate because of the reliance on water for washing/processing. If you are processing near a river, water is less of a problem. Get more than a test report and get a sample secured by someone you can rely on.
Once you get into a project, the specifications can become meaningless if the materials cause the limitations in quality.
Dick
Engineer and international traveler interested in construction techniques, problems and proper design.