- 1. Introduction
- 2. Manufacturing and production
- 2.1 AAC (autoclaved aerated concrete)
- 2.2 CLC (cellular lightweight concrete)
- 2.3 Concrete blocks (solid and hollow)
- 3. Standards and codes
- 4. Types and properties
- 5. Design and fixings
- 6. Mortar compatibility
- 7. Common failures and troubleshooting
- 8. QA and QC items
- 9. BOQ lines
- 10. Method statement — AAC block laying
- Disclaimer
Purpose: consultant-ready guide to block masonry (AAC, CLC, concrete). Use the TOC to jump to manufacturing, standards, types and properties, design and fixings, mortar compatibility, failures, QA, BOQ, and method statement.
1. Introduction
AAC and CLC blocks are lightweight engineered masonry units that provide thermal insulation and fast construction. Concrete blocks (solid and hollow) are durable and used in load-bearing and partition walls.
2. Manufacturing and production
2.1 AAC (autoclaved aerated concrete)
- Raw materials: cement, lime, fly ash, gypsum, aluminum powder (gas agent).
- Mix and pre-curing: slurry generates hydrogen microbubbles.
- Cutting: after initial set, cut by wire on casting bed.
- Autoclaving: ~180°C and ~12 bar steam curing for strength and volume stability.
- QC: density (kg/m³), moisture content, dimensional accuracy.
2.2 CLC (cellular lightweight concrete)
- Cement + fly ash + preformed foam (stable bubbles).
- Ambient curing; density set by foam volume. Lower strength than AAC but cost-effective.
2.3 Concrete blocks (solid and hollow)
- Crushed aggregates + cement mix in vibration molds.
- Cure wet or in chamber; ensure adequate compaction to avoid voids.
3. Standards and codes
- IS 2185 (Part 3) — AAC block specification.
- IS 6041 — CLC block guidelines.
- IS 2572 — Hollow concrete blocks laying.
- Manufacturer TDS for adhesives and thin-bed systems.
4. Types and properties
Type | Density (kg/m³) | Compressive strength (MPa) | Water absorption | Thermal conductivity | Remarks |
AAC block | 550–650 | 3–4 | 10–12% | ≈ 0.16 W/m·K | Low dead load, energy-efficient |
CLC block | 700–900 | 2.5–4 | 12–18% | ≈ 0.18 W/m·K | Good sound insulation |
Concrete block | 1900–2000 | 5–15 | 6–10% | ≈ 1.2 W/m·K | Durable and impact resistant |
Dimensional tolerances: ± 2–3 mm on faces for AAC; thin-bed adhesive required.
5. Design and fixings
- Thin-bed adhesive: 3–4 mm adhesive beds for AAC (faster, reduced thermal bridging).
- Anchors and fixings: Nylon/metal anchors with verified pull-out performance. For heavy loads, use chemical anchors or resin-grouted sleeves in filled cores.
- Joints: 3–4 mm thin-bed for adhesives; if cement mortar used, 10 mm nominal.
- Reinforcement: Provide vertical bars in grouted cavities for seismic/structural needs. Integrate lintel beams per structural drawings.
6. Mortar compatibility
- AAC/CLC: Thin joint adhesive (3–4 mm) instead of cement mortar.
- Concrete block: Cement–sand mortar 1:6.
7. Common failures and troubleshooting
Symptom | Cause | Diagnostics | Solution |
Corner breakage during handling | Poor handling; high block moisture | Edge spall inspection | Improve storage/handling; use pallets |
Poor adhesion to thin-bed | Dusty or uneven surfaces | Shear test | Clean, prime if required, correct trowelling |
High water absorption and damp | Blocks stored exposed to rain | Moisture meter | Dry stock before use; pre-soak if TDS recommends |
Thermal cracking in external walls | Insufficient movement joints | Crack mapping | Add movement joints; consider insulation composite cladding |
8. QA and QC items
- Accept material with MTC and batch density report.
- Dimensional checks each pallet (sample three blocks).
- Adhesive bed thickness check 3–4 mm.
- Pull-out test sampling: one per 100 anchors.
- Mock-up panels for external render and finish.
9. BOQ lines
- AAC block masonry 200 mm with thin-bed adhesive (supply and fix) — m²
- AAC external thin coat render 15 mm — m²
- Filling of hollow cores with non-shrink grout and reinforcement — m
- Supply and fix block lintel (grout + reinforcement) — m
10. Method statement — AAC block laying
- Scope and references: IS 2185 (Part 3) and manufacturer TDS.
- Materials and storage: Accept per MTC; store dry under cover on pallets.
- Work sequence: Set out lines; apply 3–4 mm adhesive bed with notched trowel; press block with light taps; remove excess; install ties and vertical reinforcement; provide lintels/bond beams at openings.
- Curing and protection: Cure per TDS; protect from rain and full sun 24–48 hours; prime and scratch coat before external finishes as required.
- QA checks and tests: Bed thickness, adhesion pull tests, dimensional and plumb checks.
Disclaimer
SpecX is a neutral, brand-agnostic resource based on standards and best practices. Cross-check with project requirements and local codes before finalizing specifications.