Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Crushed Stone or Crushed Concrete

I'm seeing a lot of crushed concrete in the material stream of projects these days, mainly as a substitute for crushed stone. I'm a big advocate of this kind of recycling, but its not always a good substitute in all situations.

It seems like a no-brainer, right? Hey, we can get crushed concrete for less than crushed stone - lets use it. That's fine, but you really have to think about where you are using it. If you are talking about the layer of stone you lay below a slab on grade for your home, then I think this is not a good place for crushed concrete. The reason gets back to why that stone is there in the first place.

The stone bed below a slab serves several purposes. First it creates a "solid" base to pour your concrete over. No soft spots, no roots or organic material to rot away in the future. Second, it allows water to drain through it. The spaces between the stone allow water to flow (and if there is water flowing under your slab it should be flowing to a drain pipe.) Those same spaces between the stone allow you to vent gases coming from the earth like radon. Crushed concrete can do all these jobs pretty well, all but this last one which is: stone provides a capillary break...! A what?

You all know what capillary action is - its how your paper towel picks up a spill, how your blood gets through those tiny vessels. In plain speak, any material with tiny tiny holes soaks up water like a sponge, and that includes the soil your slab sits on. So, when a stone layer is placed over the soil beneath your slab, it will prevent the moisture that is naturally in the soil from coming in contact with your slab. The stone has no tiny holes, only big ones, so no suction - the water stops there. Granted, your slab should have a plastic vapor barrier below it, true, but you don't want that vapor barrier to be sitting on top of wet soil. Contact with wet soil only makes it much harder for the vapor barrier to do its job keeping moisture out of the slab. Plus the placement and pouring of a concrete slab is rough work, and the chance that your vapor barrier came through without a hole is pretty slim. A hole plus wet soil would spell moisture in your slab. So believe me, you don't want moist soil right below your vapor barrier. Hence your stone layer breaks the capillary flow of water - water can not rise through the stone, and hence can't approach your slab.

And here we have the important difference between crushed stone and crushed concrete. Anybody that has put water on a sidewalk with a hose knows that the concrete absorbs water. You can't see the holes, but they're there. It has a porous structure that takes in and holds water. The crushed stone on the other hand does not. So if you use crushed concrete below your slab, its going to take up that water from the damp soil below, and its going to carry it right up to the underside of your slab - defeating the entire purpose of the stone layer. So, a word of advice. Don't do it. There's plenty of places to make good with crushed concrete in a construction project. Under your slab on grade is not one of them.

5 comments:

  1. Isn't crushed rock also porous?

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  2. It actually would depend on what kind of stone the crushed stone was made from. It can be limestone, or granite - depending on what is more common in your region. And within that the porosity of the stone coming out a given quarry at a given time can vary. But generally its not going to approach the porosity of concrete used for construction - which would later be crushed and sold as a stone substitute.

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  3. As I recall, concrete can wick moisture using capillary action up to 10 stories in height.

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  4. I am about to tear down my block and brick house and my contractor wants to recycle the material on site in order to use it in place of crushed stone for the foundation and drainage. Your article has me thinking it would not be wise to use the crushed concrete for the foundatione. What about the brick? Or, what about using a lower layer of crushed concrete and the top two inches in crushed stone or brick for the foundation?

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  5. I would make sure you have at least a couple of inches of real stone under the slab to keep the capillary break in place. But below that you could use crushed concrete.

    Brick however, and concrete block for that matter, I would not use. Brick is much softer than concrete, and concrete block is also much more porous than poured concrete. I also have doubts that they will be able to crush this material to a small enough size on site. I would not want my house sitting on top of this stuff.

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