Stay-in-place ready-to-stucco formwork system
11591794 · 2023-02-28
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
E04B2/8658
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E04G9/10
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E04B2/847
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
E04F13/045
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
A stay-in-place concrete formwork system allows stucco to be applied directly to the formwork, avoiding the need to provide a further surface treatment of the wall prior to applying stucco. Apertures are provided on an exterior facing wall of the formwork panel to receive and embed stucco therein. The panel may also be formed with outward stucco-engaging projections. Other features include using rigid insulation to brace the stucco and keep concrete from the apertures, a sealing joint element, extendible panels for use in curved formwork, rainscreen features and an alligator connector panel for adjustable lengths of formwork faces.
Claims
1. A method of using a modular panel adapted to be interconnected to other formwork panels to form stay-in-place concrete formwork to form an outward-facing wall panel of said formwork and having an outward facing substantially planar surface, wherein said modular panel has a plurality of apertures substantially throughout said surface for receiving stucco through said apertures and a plurality of projections extending inwardly from said planar surface, comprising: assembling said stay-in-place concrete formwork; installing rigid insulation against said projections such that a gap is formed between said rigid insulation and said modular panel; pouring concrete into said formwork; and applying stucco to an outside side of said planar surface so that said stucco embeds into said apertures and said gap.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein said modular panel is double walled with a space between two walls.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein said step of assembling said stay-in-place concrete formwork comprises using a modular transverse connector and a three-way joining element to maintain said modular panel in an opposed spaced relationship with an opposing panel, said three-way joining element being adapted to retain said modular panel to an adjacent modular panel and to said modular transverse connector, and said three-way joining element comprising a stub extending between adjacent edges of said modular panel and said adjacent modular panel, said stub comprising an enlarged tip for engagement with said adjacent edges so as to seal the snare between them.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein said step of assembling said stay-in-place concrete formwork comprises using a modular transverse connector to maintain said modular panel in an opposed spaced relationship with an opposing panel and interconnecting said modular panel, said opposing panel, and said connector; wherein said transverse connector comprises engagement members extending laterally from said connector; wherein said rigid insulation has cutouts for allowing a space about said engagement members when said insulation is installed in said formwork; and wherein said step of installing rigid insulation against said projections comprises installing said rigid insulation such that said cutouts are placed about said engagement members.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein said step of assembling said stay-in-place concrete formwork comprises using a modular transverse connector to maintain said modular panel in an opposed spaced relationship with an opposing panel and interconnecting said modular panel, said opposing, and said connector; wherein said transverse connector comprises engagement members extending laterally from said connector; wherein said step of installing rigid insulation against said projections comprises placing a first layer of rigid insulation on a first side of said engagement members; and wherein said method further comprises placing a second layer of rigid insulation against a second side of said engagement members so as to define a space between said first and second layers corresponding to the location of said engagement members.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein said modular panel comprises a male end and a female end; said male end comprising a stem terminating in a wedge-shaped tip, and a face extending in spaced relationship with said stem on the inside of said modular panel and extending past said tip; said female end having opposed faces defining a space between them and successive rows of rearwardly inclined opposed teeth depending from said opposed faces; said male end being engageable into said female end of a same modular panel by inserting said tip for engagement between and against said opposed teeth, said tip being selectively engageable at varying depths between successive ones of said rows of teeth.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein said step of assembling said stay-in-place concrete formwork comprises using a modular transverse connector to maintain said modular panel in an opposed spaced relationship with an opposing panel; wherein said transverse connectors comprise engagement members extending laterally from said connectors; and wherein said engagement members comprise stems having spike for engaging into said rigid insulation.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein said step of assembling said stay-in-place concrete formwork comprises using a modular transverse connector and a three-way joining element to maintain said modular panel in an opposed spaced relationship with an opposing panel and interconnecting said modular panel, said opposing panel, and said connector; wherein said three-way joining element has a body adapted to retain said modular panel to an adjacent modular panel and to said modular transverse connector; and wherein said three-way joining element further comprises a T-shaped portion extending from said body, said T-shaped portion comprising a stem extending between adjacent edges of said modular panel, said adjacent panel, and two opposed arms extending from said stem.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein each of said opposed arms comprises a rib made of a softer resilient material than said body.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The preferred and alternative embodiments of the invention will be described by reference to the drawings thereof in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19)
(20)
(21)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
(22)
(23) A plurality of apertures 22 are formed about substantially the entirety of the faces 24 of the panels 10, 12 as illustrated in
(24) In one embodiment, one side of the formwork is made of single walled panels 30 shown in
(25) When using single walled panels with apertures 22 according to the invention, a method for using the panels comprises placing rigid insulation 40 against the inside surface of the panels 30 to which stucco may then be applied through the apertures 22 on the outside surface, and placing such insulation 40 prior to pouring the concrete into the form. The rigid insulation provides a barrier to prevent the concrete from filling the apertures 22. A gap 42 is provided between the insulation 40 and the formwork panel 30 by virtue of the standoff created by the inwardly projecting mating elements 44 of the panels 30. The inwardly projecting mating elements 44 are available to be used with additional connectors 34 or with diagonal (45 degree) connectors of the type shown in
(26) In order to enhance the structural rigidity of the modular formwork system, and therefore the resulting wall, an embodiment 150 of the connector is provided with reinforcing ribs 152, 154, 156, 158 along the length of the connector as shown in
(27)
(28) In another embodiment, the formwork panels 60 forming the exterior facing side of the formwork are double-walled, as shown in
(29) In a different embodiment, illustrated in
(30) Another feature illustrated in
(31) A different aspect of an inventive system relates again to modular inter-connectable formwork elements intended to stay-in-place after concrete is poured into the formwork and has set. It is desirable in some cases to have air and fluid-tight formwork that is impermeable not only to concrete but to gases and low viscosity fluids. The modular system to which the invention relates is a system that includes side to side adjacent connectable wall panels 80, 82, which may be double-walled as shown in
(32) Referring to the enlarged view in
(33)
(34) Where a modular panel formwork system is used for a curved wall, an issue arises as to the difference in arc lengths between the outward facing panels of the formwork and the inward facing panels for the same arc angle. The panels on the inside of the curve will have a shorter length than those on the outside of the curve. One means of resolving that problem in a modular system is to predetermine the different lengths that will be needed based on the radii of curvature involved and manufacturing or selecting modular panels lengths accordingly. It will be appreciated however that precise tolerances are required. In some cases, spacers may be used intermittently along the outside wall of the formwork to make up for the extra length needed in comparison to the inner wall. The differences in length involved in concrete walls are often fairly small. For example, a concrete tank having an exterior diameter of 40 meters and a concrete wall formwork thickness of 30 cm would involve an overall circumference difference of only 0.9 meter as between the interior and exterior runs of panels. That difference translates to only about 7 mm per meter of circumference.
(35) According to an embodiment designed to address that problem, a modular inter-connectable formwork panel includes at least one non-straight pliable segment along the span of each otherwise substantially unextendible panel, rendering the panel extendible by stretching or compressing the pliable segment. Referring to
(36)
(37) Referring again to
(38) In a preferred embodiment, and referring to
(39) Preferably the pliable segment 108 is made of a more flexible material than the balance of the panel. Alternatively, the segment 108 may comprise sub-segments that have the same composition as the balance of the panel, but further comprising inflexion points (for example 116, 118, 120) that are of a more pliable flexible material.
(40) In another aspect, and referring to
(41)
(42) The male end 174 of the panel comprises opposed faces 188, 190 and a stem 192 extending between the opposed faces 188, 190 and terminating in a wedge-shaped tip 194.
(43)
(44) In example 198, tip 224 is engaged between opposed teeth 226, 228 that are one step inward from the outermost teeth. Successive examples 200, 202 and 204 illustrate progressively deeper engagements of the tips into the jaws of the female ends resulting in effectively shorter lengths of the connected panels.
(45) The alligator connector panels may be used on one wall 172 of formwork to provide varying lengths of connected panels according to the depth of engagement of the tips of the male ends into the jaws of the female ends of the panels. The alligator connector panels may be used on straight walls to form both opposing walls of formwork and to adjust the overall length of the formwork to within millimeters of a desired length. In a curved wall as shown in
(46) Preferably, the tips of the male ends of the alligator connector panel are made of a slightly deformable material such that when the connection between adjacent panels is under stress, such as when the interior of the formwork is filled with insulation or concrete, a seal may be formed between the tip of the male end and the teeth of the female end. Such a seal is useful in building walls and structures that must be water- or fluid-tight. Referring to
(47) In the foregoing description, exemplary modes for carrying out the invention in terms of examples have been described. However, the scope of the claims should not be limited by those examples, but should be given the broadest interpretation consistent with the description as a whole. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustrative rather than a restrictive sense.