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concrete

Concrete is a composite material composed of fine and coarse aggregate bonded together with a fluid cement (cement paste) that hardens (cures) over time. Concrete is the second-most-used substance in the world after water, and is the most widely used building material. Its usage worldwide, ton for ton, is twice that of steel, wood, plastics, and aluminum combined. Globally, the ready-mix concrete industry, the largest segment of the concrete market, is projected to exceed $600 billion in revenue by 2025. This widespread use results in a number of environmental impacts. Most notably, the production process for cement produces large volumes of greenhouse gas emissions, leading to net 8% of global emissions. Other environmental concerns include widespread illegal sand mining, impacts on the surrounding environment such as increased surface runoff or urban heat island effect, and potential public health implications from toxic ingredients. Significant research and development is being done to try to reduce the emissions or make concrete a source of carbon sequestration, and increase recycled and secondary raw materials content into the mix to achieve a circular economy. Concrete is expected to be a key material for structures resilient to climate disasters, as well as a solution to mitigate the pollution of other industries, capturing wastes such as coal fly ash or bauxite tailings and residue.
When aggregate is mixed with dry Portland cement and water, the mixture forms a fluid slurry that is easily poured and molded into shape. The cement reacts with the water through a process called concrete hydration that hardens over several hours to form a hard matrix that binds the materials together into a durable stone-like material that has many uses. This time allows concrete to not only be cast in forms but also to have a variety of tooled processes preformed. The hydration process is exothermic, which means ambient temperature plays a significant role in how long it takes concrete to set. Often, additives (such as pozzolans or superplasticizers) are included in the mixture to improve the physical properties of the wet mix, delay or accelerate the curing time, or otherwise change the finished material. Most concrete is poured with reinforcing materials (such as rebar) embedded to provide tensile strength, yielding reinforced concrete.
In the past, lime based cement binders, such as lime putty, were often used but sometimes with other hydraulic cements, (water resistant) such as a calcium aluminate cement or with Portland cement to form Portland cement concrete (named for its visual resemblance to Portland stone). Many other non-cementitious types of concrete exist with other methods of binding aggregate together, including asphalt concrete with a bitumen binder, which is frequently used for road surfaces, and polymer concretes that use polymers as a binder. Concrete is distinct from mortar. Whereas concrete is itself a building material, mortar is a bonding agent that typically holds bricks, tiles and other masonry units together.

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  1. B

    Moving Earthenware Waste in Concrete

    So judging by the other thread I started I'm going to struggle to connect a new toilet with my waste pipe hole being so far from the wall (about 30-35cm to be precise). I am therefore thinking about the logistics of moving the opening. As the title suggests, it is a ceramic/clay/earthenware...
  2. M

    Leaking Soil Pipe

    Hi Guys, new on here and hope this is the right place to post.... I have a soul pipe from the upstairs toilet going down into the ground in a garage, at the garage level it has a washing machine waste going into it. The concrete around the base has always looked damp (sometimes very) and I've...
  3. S

    Explanation for wet concrete floor near soil pipe.

    I'm preparing to tile the floor... The floor near to the soil pipe remains wet (after cleaning) for longer and now, with toilet removed, the area has become wetter over the course of today after heavy rain. The flexible white soil pipe "connector" in the floor connects to what appears to be a...
  4. Z

    CH pipes in concrete floor - replace or not?

    Hi all, I am in the process of refurbishing a 1965 detached bungalow. I have discovered that all the central heating pipes are buried inside the concrete floor. I am planning to put solid wood floor down, so I am wandering is it a good idea to leave the CH pipe work as it is or should I...
  5. P

    no fines concrete

    I've got a job where I need to install a radiator into a living room that currently doesn't have any only a gas fire, I can't seem to find any heartless/rad calculation for no fines concrete walls Any help would be much appreciated
  6. R

    Damp proof membranes on concrete floor - urgent help please

    Hi there Can you please help - our builder seems to have little knowledge of buildings regulations so we are struggling with our extension/conversion. We are converting part of an internal garage plus existing room into a new kitchen. Problem is there are 2 different floor heights for the new...
  7. W

    MDPE Underground pipe in concrete?

    Hi there, Does anyone know if MDPE under ground pipe has to be protected in some way when being buried in concrete? Thanks in advance :-)
  8. P

    Garden room drainage...

    Hi folks, I'm trying to work out drainage for garden room with 1 x toilet, 1 x basin, 1 x shower. Because the drain has to run several metres to get to the building, there is very little height to play with to connect into it. I have attached a sketch of what I'm thinking of doing...
  9. C

    Horrible smell from rear of toilet

    Moved into an old council house and I think the toilet soil pipe is leaking I fitted a new pipe but we still have the same smelly problem. I noticed that waste appears to be coming back behind the toilet soil pipe , should I use rods to clear any possible problem? Or use concrete to fill around...
  10. C

    Space below cylinder?

    Replacing an ancient copper hot water cylinder. The airing cupboard has a fully boarded floor and the cylinder is supported on three bearers, resting on the floor, each approximately an inch and a half wide by two inches high. I question whether bearers are needed? Can I just put the new...
  11. J

    MDPE in concrete

    Hi, I've extended my mains water mdpe pipe through into my new extension and brought it up through the slab under the new kitchen window. However, I've had to change my kitchen window into a set of French doors and so the pipe is now in the way. I want to break into the slab back down to the...
  12. M

    Planning permission for underground oil tank

    Hello, Do you need planning permission to install an oil tank underground? Planning portal says Installing a fuel tank is considered to be permitted development, not needing planning permission, subject to the following limits and conditions: Not more than 3,500 litres capacity. Not forward...
  13. S

    How much for re-pipe to CH radiators as had leak in concrete floor 2 bed FF Flat

    I need a quote for full repipe of Central Heating System due to water leak under the floor and unable to fix due to concrete floor 15mm pipe x 79m 22mm x 10m drain down and inhibit system Thank you
  14. M

    do I need to wrap (duct tape) or sleeve, plastic piping going into concrete floor?

    hi just wondering which is the best way to go about it, have a radiator to be fitted in a conservatory and the customer wants it to be chased into the concrete floor.
  15. cr0ft

    Replacing a Concrete Screed Floor

    Hi all, After a bit of advice. Yes, I fit wetrooms occasionally but we are quoting to replace a bathroom in a 1 bathroom house with a wetroom. The existing bathroom has a concrete floor and the lady wants a level access wetroom as she has severe arthritis. I know there is the option of...
  16. B

    saniflo question

    been asked to fit a toilet and basin and shower,can get the shower/basin away by gravity but been asked to incorporate a bog into it can i take the saniflo into the shower/basin waste if i fit non return valves?
  17. D

    shower tray on concrete floor

    hi guys I've got my first bathroom job on my own, the customer wants the shower tray on the floor and its a concrete floor so other than building a base for it and having a plinth can you bury the trap and waste pipe its not ideal incase there is leaks in the future i know any suggestions thanks dom
  18. A

    Leak in concrete floor

    Ok so have a water leak in a pipe in a concrete floor. Insurance sent a guy out who said there was a loose connection on the stopcock. Tightened it but not solved Next guy says it is the water main, he can here it leaking and need a new water main £1000????? Now if that's what's needed so be...
  19. R

    Routing new 28mm gas pipe in channel in concrete floor

    Hi. Need to run a new section of 28mm gas pipe (no joints as less than 3m) across the concrete kitchen floor. Thinking of using 2"x2" galvanised electrical trunking set in a 3" deep channel, the pipe then packed in sand and the lid put on then channel concreted in. Would this be acceptable? Not...
  20. plumb_know

    Laying pipe in concrete?

    Hi everyone, I have a customer who needs a flow and return pipe run in their concrete floor for their hallway radiator. The current pipes are surface mounted but due them changing the position of the door they now need running in concrete. The only problem I am having is how to run it so I do...

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