During the first half of the twentieth century, the US Bureau of Reclamation's engineers designed increasingly ambitious dams, culminating in the early 1930s with the construction of Boulder Dam (now known as Hoover Dam) on the Colorado River. Such projects required advancing the state of materials science, especially in understanding the behaviour of mass concrete as it hardened, leading in turn to new methods for pouring mass concrete. One requirement, when pouring a mass as large as Boulder Dam, was to remove the tremendous amount of heat generated by hydration, the chemical reaction that occurs as concrete cures, in order to keep the volumetric change of the mass to a minimum and thereby avoid undue cracking. Reclamation engineers developed a method to cool Boulder Dam's concrete mechanically, which they tested during the construction of Owyhee Dam in Oregon, which preceded Boulder Dam as the world's highest dam. This relationship between the construction of Owyhee Dam and Boulder Dam demonstrates the application of scientific research and the high level of complexity that engineers were able to manage well before the formal advent of systems engineering in the second half of the twentieth century.
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November 2013
Research Article|
September 30 2013
Cooling mass concrete: Owyhee, Hoover, and building large dams
Fredric L. Quivik, PhD
Fredric L. Quivik, PhD
Associate Professor Department of Social Sciences, Michigan Technological University, Houghton, USA
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
November 17 2012
Accepted:
July 09 2013
Online ISSN: 1757-9449
Print ISSN: 1757-9430
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2013
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering History and Heritage (2013) 166 (4): 236–247.
Article history
Received:
November 17 2012
Accepted:
July 09 2013
Citation
Quivik FL (2013), "Cooling mass concrete: Owyhee, Hoover, and building large dams". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering History and Heritage, Vol. 166 No. 4 pp. 236–247, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/ehah.12.00015
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