Masonry Flashcards

1
Q

What is masonry?

A
  • Any structure made by stacking, piling, bonding discrete pieces to form a whole
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2
Q

Bricks and Blocks 1 = Fired Clay

A
  • Made from moist clay
  • Pressed into shape
  • Fired at 850-1300 degrees C
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3
Q

Bricks and Blocks 2 = Calcium Silicate

A
  • Lime, silica sand and water
  • Cured in high pressure steam room for hours
  • Lime reacts with sand to bind together - makes precise and smooth bricks
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4
Q

Bricks and Blocks 3 = Concrete

A
  • Same ingredients as normal concrete
  • Mix compacted in mould by pressing, before moulds instantly removed
  • Needs to support own weight almost instantly after casting
  • Less water, cement and fine aggregate than normal mix
  • Steam curing accelerates strength gain
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5
Q

Bricks and Blocks 4 = Natural Stone

A
  • Rough irregular shapes
  • Considered good for environment but only is if local stone
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6
Q

Durability Affectors

A
  • Staining (efflorescence, iron and bio)
  • Chemical attack (rain, carbonation, sulphate and corrosion)
  • Erosion (frost, crypto-efflorescence and abrasion)
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7
Q

Staining 1 = Efflorescence

A
  • Soluble salts disolved by water and crystalize on brick surface
  • Salts in clay, ground water and mortar
  • White stain on brickwork
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8
Q

Staining 2 = Iron

A
  • Orange/brown stains
  • Iron in bricks and mortar (if well distributed won’t cause a problem)
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9
Q

Staining 3 = Biological

A
  • Growth of moss or fungi
  • ONLY in wet conditions
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10
Q

Chemical Attack 1 = Rainwater

A
  • Pure water has no effect but Co2 in rainwater means it is slightly acidic so it reacts with calicum carbonate present in brickworks
  • Acid rain near high pollution areas increases rate
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11
Q

Chemical Attack 2 = Carbonation

A
  • Calcium hydroxide from lime or cement combines with Co2 in air to make cal carb
  • Carbonated mortar isn’t an alkaline now and has less protection
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12
Q

Chemical Attack 3 = Sulphate

A
  • Diffuse into concrete and reacts with concrete’s calcium
  • Can cause expansion, cracking and loss of strength
  • From sea water, soils or interal sulphates
  • To resist = lower cal content, low WC ration (more cement) or cement replacement materials
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13
Q

Chemical Attack 4 = Corrosion

A
  • Other processes accelerate it
  • Calcium hydroxide reacts with CO2 over time - carbonation reduced pH to near 9 - passivity of steel is destroyed (protection is destroyed)
  • Protect steel to avoid corrosion
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14
Q

Erosion 1 = Frost

A
  • Bricks and mortar are affected
  • Due to expansion when water freezes
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15
Q

Erosion 2 = Crypto-efflorescence

A
  • Same process as efflorescence
  • Under some temps/humidity salts crystalise below brick surface
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16
Q

Mortar used to bond masonry

A
  • Cement, sand and water
  • Bricks can absorb water and this depends on the amount of water that is needed in morta
17
Q

Modern masonry

A
  • Single skin of bricks in stretcher bond pattern with inner skin of concrete blocks to provide reinforcement
18
Q

Compressive loading (top/bottom)

A
  • Strongest resistance (load baring walls, tunnels)
  • Test individual units
  • Cracks form in mortar joins
  • Depends more on masonry strenght not the mortar
19
Q

Compressive loading (sides)

A
  • Lower resistance as in line with the mortar
20
Q

Sheer loading

A
  • One side pushing top, other at bottom
  • Caused by wind/impact
21
Q

Flexural loading (either side and middle)

A
  • Aka bending
  • Either snaps straight through mortar and bricks or zig zags down through mortar