Monday 4 December 2017

Technical terms and meaning


  TECHNICAL TERM AND MEANING   


AASHTO
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials.

ABILITY
Strength of Materials
The intrinsic characteristic of a material to respond to external stresses, (e.g., absorption ability, de formation ability).

ABILITY BENDING TEST
A test to check the ability of steel to undergo bending stresses without significant degradations of its internal structure.
A test bar positioned on two parallel supports is bent by a round punch pressed in the centre of the bar. No cracks must appear either on the edge or convex faces of the fold in the bar.

ABLATION
1. Loss of mineral matter of a rock due to Erosion.
2. The eroding of a river bed due to the combined abrasive action of water and
Waterborne materials in it.

ABNORMAL COLORING
Defects (Building Materials)
A color modification in wood that indicates a change of its chemical composition and, thus of its properties. This defect can make the wood unsuitable for some uses. Syn. With ABNORMAL TINTING

ABNORMAL CONTACTS
Defects (Civil Engineering Structure)
In suspension or guy bridges, parasitic contacts between the mechanically independent parts that
Are due to a bad design or bad adjustment of the suspension. These contacts can occur between cables or distinct layers or with a part of the structure, such as: abutment, deck, parapet, etc.

ABNORMAL PERMANENT SAG
Defects (Construction)
The abnormal sag of a portion or a complete
Span in the absence or presence of any accidental overload on the entire work. The abnormal sag can be stable or evolutionary and can result from: a geometrical error during construction; an increase of the permanent load, or a diminishing of the bearing capacity of the structure; an accidental loading on a portion of the structure.

ABRASION
A wearing phenomenon that generates a loss of metal mass due to mechanical action of an external body. Or
The deterioration of stones or bricks due to matter removal on the surface by solid bodies carried by water or air. Abrasion can be superficial or deep.

ABRASION RESISTANCE
Building Materials the resistance in a material that opposes surface wearing generated by the action, intentional or not, of another material or fluid.

ABSOLUTE POROSITY OF STONE
Building Materials the ratio of the volume of the voids to the total apparent volume of the stone, the void including the volume occupied by both imbibition and hygrometric water (excluding combination Water).

ABSOLUTE DENSITY
The specific volume of the particles of a portion of ground that is assumed to be without voids; it is called YS.

ABUTMENT
Construction
The end bearing of a deck, a vault, a beam or an arch. Abutments are highly important parts of a bridge and must be studied carefully, since their morphologies quite different.. A bridge can comprise arches, vaults, or decks, and the abutment supports these structures and connects the bridge to the natural rock by supporting generally speaking, the earth pressure. In the case of arches or vaults, the abutment supports the pressure of these structures. Abutments can be built of masonry, concrete, reinforced concrete, possibly pre-stressed concrete, and even in curtains of sheet piles. Abutments comprise, generally a front wall and lateral walls called wing walls or return walls according to their location.

ABUTMENT PIER
Construction
A half-arch-shaped pillar for staying a wall or a vault in order to reinforce it. Syn. with ARCHED BUTTRESS; FLYING BUTTRESS. Or
1. A pier placed between two unequal arches or between a masonry arch and a metal span.
2. In a viaduct with equal arches, a pier that shows an allowance compared with the others (one on four or five) and that is buttressed on the lateral part. This type of construction limits the destruction of the work in case an arch breaks.
3. A construction intended to resist a strongly inclined force.

ABYSSINIAN WELL
Foundation

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