The most common application for temperature measurement sensors inside fresh concrete is to monitor the absolute maximum temperature of the concrete during curing / hydration, and relative temperature differentials between the centre and external surfaces.
Traditionally concrete thermocouples and simple data loggers may have been used, but self contained temperature loggers are now common for on site applications where the reliability and security of data is essential.
The Concrete maturity method is based on the american standard ASTM C1074 and is used to estimate the early age strength of in situ concrete using a calculated index value that is based on how long the concrete has been in place on site, and what the concrete temperature is during that time on site.
A calibration curve for each mix design used in a project or in a precast yard allows the measured maturity index to convert to an Mpa strength value, reducing the need for early age cylinder breaks.
The Hot Box method is used as input data for the prediction of in situ concrete temperature rise when modelling a concrete pour.
A 1 m square block of concrete made to the same recipe as an in situ mix is cast in an insulated box and temperature monitored during its curing.
PCTE's Hot Box Data Logging solutions simplify the collection of temperature measurements from this setup, offering a package with temperature sensors, datalogger and the option of strain gauges if required. No programing is required to setup the simple data logger.