Monday, 25 December 2017

Technical terms explanation



ANCHORAGE

Construction of P.C.; Construction;

 Foundation and Masonry

 In the pre stressed concrete, a device to keep taut a cable and transmit the pre stressing force to the concrete. There are two types of anchorages: active, in which the anchorage heads are outside the concrete; passive, in which short cables emerge only at one end, which is directly anchored in concrete; this anchorage is particularly used in statically indeterminate beams. A the end of the cable is a fixed anchoring; at the other end is a mobile anchoring which is used for tensioning.
Syn with BRACING.

AXLE

Foundation

The location of the centers of gravity of the cross section.

BALLAST PILE

Foundation:

A kind of pile or well composed of a shaft of brought materials with studied grading, placed in a drilling and compacted into the ground with a radial vibrator placed at the point of a tube used as a support.


 BALLASTED MATTRESS

Foundation

 A device formed by a very resistant fabric (polypropylene mostly) in which hooks are drowned. These hooks are intended to fix concrete blocks poured directly on the mattress. This device is intended to protect the base of the piles or abutments in watery site. (An alternative of this device consists of a layer of very resistant fabric comprising flanges filled with sand or gravel.)

 BALLAST-GUARD LOW WALL

A retaining dwarf wall of masonry established at the end of the railway bridges with a steel deck to separate the railway platform from the deck and to head off the ballast from running toward bearings.
The capital, made up of a square tablet forming raised table, a quarter of circle, and a fille.

You may like to read this.!! 

 BALLING UP

Foundation

Clogging of the bore bit of a drill by accumulation of cuttings. Syn. with BIT BALLING.

 BARRAGE

Barrage

Civil Engineering Structure

 A construction forming a retaining wall, generally established in a river to create a pond age and in which the thrust is normal to the wall. Generally speaking, the purpose of a barrage is, either to regularize the flow of the river which it intercepts, or to use the driving force of the water. One calls permanent barrage, the one of which no part is movable; sluice weir, the one established by means of juxtaposed sluices; girders barrage, the one made of horizontal wooden pieces (beams), engaging into vertical grooves; needles weir, a movable barrage able to be erased entirely in time of flood and made of light vertical wooden pieces (needles) which rest on a sill fitted out in a foundation raft. Among the main types of barrage we can distinguish: buttress dam (le barrage à contre forts), formed by a shell strengthened by a system of buttresses; it can be built of masonry or concrete; earth-fill dam (le barrage en remblai), carried out with materials often taken near its construction. Its shape and composition depend on the quality of the materials taken; rock-fill dam (le barrage en enrichments), generally made of a tight ground newel covered with ordinary materials themselves covered by ripraps. This type of barrage takes on a trapezoidal shape and presents a cross section of a quite considerable thickness; homogeneous earth-fill dam built with tight materials (example: compacted clay); heterogeneous earth-fill dam, carried out when one does not have impermeable grounds in sufficient quantity and whose ground then constitutes an impermeable, vertical, or tilted central newel, contained between the bearing blocks (downstream) or protection (upstream) called fills and consisting of very diverse materials (generally speaking, sandy and rocky grounds). Filters are interposed between the newel and the fills to avoid the migration of the ground in the latter. The downstream filter collects moreover the water which can percolate through the newel. The materials are very carefully compacted to reduce the spaces, to improve the mechanical qualities of the materials and to avoid deformations of the work. This type of barrage is very sensitive to erosion by the water.

BINDING POWER

Civil Engineering

The ability for spontaneous cementing of certain materials.
(This quality is especially required to increase the stability of certain embankments.)
 Syn. with BINDING CAPACITY.

BINDING

Construction of R.C. and P.C.; Work

 1 A metal reinforcement going into the composition of the bar setting of a reinforced concrete structure (beam, slab, etc.) and that connects main bars between themselves. The stirrup prevents the slipping of concrete layers on each other (resistance to shearing stress).
Syn. with BINDER BAR; LINK; SECONDARY REINFORCEMENT; STIRRUP; TIE.
2. Syn. with BINDER BAR.
3. Syn. with HELICAL REINFORCEMENT; HOOP REINFORCEMENT; HOOPING the anisotropy brought about in some materials by outside actions enables the analysis of the stress field through photo elasticimetry. The axis of birefringence, in a point, are directed following the main directions of stresses in this point. Syn. with DOUBLE REFRACTIO.

BLINDING CONCRETE

Building Materials any lean concrete intended for use as a bed to receive the concrete of the foundation plates (or rafts) so as to avoid its direct contact with the foundation ground. It must have a crushing strength at least equal to that of the foundation ground. Syn. with MATTRESS; MUDMAT; MUDSILL; OVERSITE CONCRETE; SLOPE CONCRETE.



Read more


All about Civil engineering site works.

No comments:

Post a Comment