Thermal Expansion Concrete Problem

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the appropriate expansion gap for concrete slabs on a highway, given a temperature range from -20.0 to +40.0 degrees Celsius. The initial calculation yielded 7.2 mm, which was not among the provided options, leading to confusion about the correct temperature difference to use. Clarification was provided that the maximum temperature difference relevant for expansion is indeed 20 degrees Celsius, not 40. Ultimately, the correct gap size to prevent buckling was determined to be 3.6 mm. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding thermal expansion principles in practical applications.
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Homework Statement


A highway is made of concrete slabs that are 15 m long at 20.0 degrees Celsius.

(a) If the temperature range at the location of the highway is from -20.0degrees Celsius to +40.0degrees Celsius, what size expansion gap should be left (at 20.0degrees Celsius) to prevent buckling of the highway?

1. 3.8 mm
2. 1.6 mm
3. 3.6 mm
4. 4.2 mm
5. 2.6 mm

(b) How large are the gaps at -20.0 degrees Celsius?

1. 9.5 mm
2. 11.7 mm
3. 11.0 mm
4. 12.7 mm
5. 10.8 mm

Homework Equations


L=L0*a*T

The Attempt at a Solution


I plugged in the values I have and I got:

L=15*(12*10-6)*40 and got .0072 meters, or 7.2 millimeters, but that isn't one of the options.

I can't do 'B' until I have A.

Am I plugging in the values incorrectly?

Help?
 
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I tried the problem again and still get 7.2 millimeters. Does anybody know what exactly I'm doing wrong?
 
Do I have to divide the 7.2 by 2? That's the only possible relation that I see between what I'm getting and the possible answers, being 3.6.
 
Why did you use 40 for the temperature difference? The hottest it gets is 40 degrees, so the maximum possible temperature difference is 20 degrees.
 
ideasrule said:
Why did you use 40 for the temperature difference? The hottest it gets is 40 degrees, so the maximum possible temperature difference is 20 degrees.

But wouldn't it be 40 since the difference between -20 and 20 is 40?
 
But the concrete contracts when temperature is lowered, so you wouldn't need to leave a gap. You'd need to leave a gap when it expands.
 
ideasrule said:
But the concrete contracts when temperature is lowered, so you wouldn't need to leave a gap. You'd need to leave a gap when it expands.

Ooohhhh, that makes sense. Yeah, 3.6 worked. Thanks for the help, I really appreciate it.
 
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