Skip to main content

Concrete removal using high pressure water jets

The use of high-pressure water jets to remove old concrete on structures is becoming increasingly popular Hydrodemolition of concrete structures by robotic equipment is becoming an increasingly used method for removing deteriorated concrete with high-pressure water techniques. It offers the selective removal of deteriorated concrete, while retaining sound concrete below the intended level of removal, a process that will not damage rebar or cause micro-cracks in the concrete, as will mechanical methods s
April 11, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
An Aquajet HVD6000 Aqua Cutter was used to prepare a section of the A22 in Vienna for new impact barriers

The use of high-pressure water jets to remove old concrete on structures is becoming increasingly popular

Hydrodemolition of concrete structures by robotic equipment is becoming an increasingly used method for removing deteriorated concrete with high-pressure water techniques.

It offers the selective removal of deteriorated concrete, while retaining sound concrete below the intended level of removal, a process that will not damage rebar or cause micro-cracks in the concrete, as will mechanical methods such as jackhammers, says Swedish specialist 2784 Aquajet.

Over the years the hydrodemolition process and equipment has developed, and today the robotic units are capable of performing vertically, horizontally, and overhead as standard units. Attachments are available that allow removal from the underside of bridge decks, columns, and parapet beams to name a few.

Complete hydrodemolition units comprise a high-pressure pump, driving engine and control system housed in the acoustically-treated container and a hydrodemolition robot with a series of standard tools. Computerised control plays a key role in the performance quality and design of hydrodemolition equipment, allowing the machines to carry out repetitive tasks automatically.

The key element of hydrodemolition is to pressure and widen existing pores and micro-cracks in the weakened concrete structure using high-pressure water penetration. Material is removed as the build up pressure exceeds the tensile strength of the damaged or weakened concrete.

Claimed advantages to using hydrodemolition include a rough, irregular surface to provide an excellent bond for repair material; fracturing in the leftover concrete caused by mechanical removal methods are eliminated; lower strength and deteriorated concrete is selectively removed, and vibration to the surrounding structure is eliminated.

Examples of the use of hydrodemolition techniques on structures, particularly bridges, worldwide are many, and one such can be related by Austrian hydrodemolition specialist contractor Rohsler & Co. It used an Aqua Cutter HVD6000 from Swedish company Aquajet to remove more than 300m³ of concrete to expose rebar for installation of new impact barriers in the Austrian capital Vienna.

While work was being carried out to construct a 1.2km extension to the city's A22 road in a bid to solve traffic congestion, the highway authority as part of the project to upgrade the impact barriers along the existing 300m long elevated section of the A22, and hydrodemolition techniques were the specified preferred option to expose the bridge rebar.

Röhsler & Co was appointed main sub-contractor responsible for the work, opting to use its HVD6000 Aqua Cutter to cut an 80cm wide channel to a depth of 25cm to expose the rebar, removing all the concrete along the outer edge of the highway platform.

Using a high-pressure jet of water (the HVD6000 robot was coupled to a Woma pump supplying water at a pressure with 1,200 bar and a flow rate of 200 litres/min), the diesel-powered Aqua Cutter robot blasted the concrete without causing any damage to the structure or the reinforcement bars, and in a second adjacent cut, Röhsler & Co prepared a further channel

1m x 5cm to expose the top rebar without causing any damage. New rebar was then embedded into the 1m section and across to the new extended bridge edge, further reinforcing the exposed rebar.

A new 1.4-1.6m wide concrete platform was formed with a 20-30cm thickness and supported by temporary formwork scaffolding, while the new improved steel impact barrier meets with the latest EU regulations. An outer steel and fibreglass infill canopy provides an aesthetic finish and noise damping.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A Wirtgen W 100 CFi mills about in Austria
    December 15, 2017
    In Austria, a Wirtgen W 100 CFi compact milling machine with deep milling unit is being used for trenching prior to the laying of broadband cables – just before it sets to work milling off entire pavements. Work is being done in Engelhartszell in the Upper Austrian district of Schärding, not far from the German border. Contractor Hemmelmair Frästechnik, from Linz, is making use of the W 100 CFi’s cutting-edge technology, in this case made from steel and carbide.
  • Scottish mountain highway toast to SuDS
    June 24, 2013
    Highway degradation and surface water pollution in an environmentally sensitive area of the Scottish Cairngorms Mountains, famous for its whisky production, are said to have been tackled with an innovative SuDS Solution from Hydro International. Poor drainage, flooding and freezing weather had led to a landslip and extreme surface degradation along a section of the narrow A95 that descends on a 10% gradient with tight bends to the beautiful village of Craigellachie on the River Spey, near Elgin. Situated im
  • Steel sealed on Stonecutters Bridge
    February 6, 2012
    The stone mastic asphalt surface being laid on the bridge deck. The Stonecutters Bridge in Hong Kong, the second longest spanning cable stayed bridge in the world, is a dual three-lane crossing of the Rambler Channel. It utilises 33,500tonnes of structural steel in the bridge deck; 32,000m3 of concrete in the towers and 65 steel deck units relying on 224 cables. Effectively protecting the megastructure's deck from the weather extremes (monsoon rains and extreme heat in the summer) and the high levels of tra
  • Greater efficiency with highway work zone safety
    April 2, 2014
    Leading highway work zone safety solution manufacturers have developed innovative new systems offering greater utility and efficiency for work crews involved in vital highways’ projects. Guy Woodford reports Mobile Barriers is now offering its MBT-1 barrier with cranes, scissor lifts, camera-communication towers and other options to enhance the system’s utility and efficiency. “This has been largely client driven and an outgrowth of our ongoing development for the transportation and security/defence s