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There are various type of cracks which can develop in a concrete structure. These can be
superficial or critical to the integrity of the structure and can have various causes, and
accordingly various remedies. Depending upon the type of cracks, the situation can be
assessed and remedial measures taken accordingly. A simple method to check whether cracks
are superficial or deep is to strike the cracked concrete with a hammer. If the hammer makes
a ringing noise then cracks are superficial while if the noise is dull, then it means that
delamination has occurred in concrete and crack is deep.
Determining what crack width is acceptable and when cracks become problematic is a
subjective topic with no clear cut and precise answer. However, following criteria can be
used as a guideline for cracks appearing in a structure after being in service for a long time.
If cracks are less than 1/16 inch in width, and do not penetrate deep into the concrete then
they can be totally ignored as these are normal superficial cracks.
Cracks which are 1/16 inch to 1/4 inch in width need to be assessed. If these are not deep and
are static i.e. they are not lengthening or widening with time then they can also be ignored.
If cracks are wider than 1/4 inch, they need to be properly assessed by a structural engineer
and remedial measures should be adopted as per structural requirement.
However, Plastic Shrinkage cracks can be more critical as these can penetrate to full depth of
concrete structure. They are caused by rapid loss of water from fresh concrete, or due to
settlement of aggregates in the concrete. These cracks usually occur in slabs which have large
surface area from where water can rapidly evaporate. Escaping of water from surface can be
prevented by covering concrete with PE sheet, or by wet curing of concrete.
Structural Cracks
If cracks continue to grow in length and width then it is sign for trouble. It means the member
is over stressed. The location of cracks will indicate what the failure mode of structural
member is. In beams, for example, there can be mainly two types of cracks i.e. shear cracks,
or flexural cracks as shown in the figure below.
If these types of cracks appear in a beam then it will need retrofitting in the form of jacketing,
or load on the beam may have to be reduced to reduce the stress within allowable limits.
Shear failure of beam can be brittle and without any warning, while if the beam is correctly
designed then flexural failure should be ductile.
Beam may exhibit compression failure cracks which are due to incorrect design of beam. If
beam is over reinforced, then this type of failure will occur. Cracks will appear in the
compression zone of beam accompanied by crushing of concrete.
Repair of such cracks may be done by providing additional compression reinforcement such
that balanced design is achieved, and jacketing of beam.
There can also be another type of cracking in structure which is caused by rusting of
reinforcement. These are horizontal in direction and can be on the sides or bottom/top of the
Beam or underside of Slab. Their depth will be up to the concrete cover. If this is the case
then concrete cover needs to be removed and rust must be removed from all around the
reinforcement, then member should be repaired by applying rust inhibitor and polymer or
cement based repair material or epoxy coating.
Another type of cracking can be due to Alkali-Silica Reaction (ASR). This happens when
aggregates contain some minerals which react with alkalies present in concrete. Aggregates
should be tested for ASR, or low alkali cement should be used if use of reactive aggregates is
unavoidable. These take the form of alligator cracks with appearance of white bi-product of
reaction in the cracks as shown below:
These types of cracks are most difficult to deal with. The alkali-silica reaction will continue
as long as there is alkali and reactive silica present in cement, and as long as they are in
contact with each other. Once any of these conditions cease to exist the reaction will stop. It
might be the case that although initially cracks appearing in the structure are very few but
potential for ASR to continue is large, which will mean that cracking will continue and
eventually become large. Hence, depending upon the extent of damage, and potential for
ASR to continue, repair work can be carried out by removing the damaged concrete and
jacketing the member. In worst case, structural member may have to be demolished and re-
built.