
Most materials expand when they are heated, and contract when they are cooled. When free to deform, concrete will expand or contract due to fluctuations in temperature. Concrete expands slightly as temperature rises and contracts as temperature falls.Click to see full answer. Just so, does curing concrete expand?A.: When it first dries, concrete shrinks and undergoes structural alterations that make some of the shrinkage irreversible. Thus, even if it is later resaturated, the initial drying shrinkage isn’t fully recovered. However, concrete does indeed expand when it gets hot or when the moisture content changes.One may also ask, are concrete expansion joints necessary? 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. Likewise, how much does concrete expand and contract? A general value for concrete’s coefficient of thermal expansion is about 5.5 millionths/° F. If an unrestrained, 100-foot-long slab on grade was exposed to a 100° F temperature drop throughout its cross-section, it would contract about . 66 inch (100 feet x 12 inches/foot x 100° F x . 0000055).How big can a concrete slab be without expansion joints?Usually, expansion joints should be no farther apart than 2 to 3 times (in feet) the total width of the concrete (in inches). So for a 4 inch thick concrete slab, expansion joints should be no more than 8 to 12 feet apart.
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