Translucent concrete (also: light-transmitting concrete) is a concrete based building material with light-transmissive properties due to embedded light optical elements — usually optical fibers. Light is conducted through the stone from one end to the other. Therefore, the fibers have to go through the whole object. This results in a certain light pattern on the other surface, depending on the fiber structure. Shadows cast onto one side appear as silhouettes through the material.[1]

Translucent concrete at Expo Bau 2011, München/Germany

Translucent concrete is used in fine architecture as a façade material and for the cladding of interior walls. Light-transmitting concrete has also been applied to various design products.[2][3]

Several ways of producing translucent concrete exist. All are based on a fine grain concrete (ca. 95%) and only 5% light conducting elements that are added during the casting process. After setting, the concrete is cut to plates or stones with standard machinery for cutting stone materials.[1][4]

Due to bends in the fibers and roughnesses on the cut surfaces of the fibers, light transmission is generally a bit less than half the incident light on the fibers, so given five percent fibers, about two percent.[5][6] As the human eye's response to light is non-linear, this can still give useful daylighting.

In theory, the fibers could carry light around corners and over a distance of tens of meters,[7] with the rate of loss increasing with length depending on the type of fiber and how it is bent.

Working with natural light, it has to be ensured that enough light is available. Wall mounting systems need to be equipped with some form of lighting, designed to achieve uniform illumination on the full plate surface. Usually mounting systems similar to natural stone panels are used — e.g., LUCEM uses perforated mounting with visible screws, undercut anchors with agraffes or façade anchors.[4]

History

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Translucent concrete has been first mentioned in a 1935 Canadian patent.[8] But since the development of optical glass fibres and polymer based optical fibers the rate of inventions and developments in this field has drastically increased. There have also been inventions that apply this concept to more technical applications like fissure detection. In the early 1990s forms like translucent concrete products popular today with fine & layered patterns were developed.[9][10][11][12]

Today several companies produce translucent concrete with very different [citation needed] production systems. Some manufacturers are:

  • Florak Bauunternehmung GmbH, Heinsberg/Germany
  • LBM EFO, Berching/Germany
  • LiTraCon Bt, Csongrád/Hungary
  • LUCEM GmbH, Aachen/Germany
  • Luccon Lichtbeton GmbH, Klaus/Austria
  • LiCrete, by Gravelli/Czech Republic

Variants

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Apart from fine fiber patterns due to the use of optical fibers or textiles some products with much coarser light pattern are available. The main advantage of these products is that on large scale objects the texture is still visible — while the texture of finer translucent concrete becomes indistinct at distance. Further pictograms and lettering can be realized with this technology.[4][3]

An approach that does not use waveguides involves using transparent aggregate and binders.[13] However, chemically this would not necessarily resemble concrete, and might resemble fiberglass. Unlike materials requiring alignment of optical fibers, however, it might be transported and poured using existing infrastructure.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Roye, Andreas; Barlé, Marijan; Thomas, Gries (2009). Faser- und Textilbasierte Lichtleitung in Betonbauteilen. Aachen, Germany: Schaker Verlag. ISBN 978-3-8322-7297-5.
  2. ^ "Dr. med. aesthete - Aesthetic interior partitioning made from translucent concrete for a dental clinic in Genk". OpucsC - Concrete, Architecture & Design. 4/2011 (4). ad-media: 62–63. 2011.
  3. ^ a b "Lucem - Light transmitting Concrete – Lucem GMBH Aachen, Germany". lucem.com.
  4. ^ a b c LUCEM Translucent Concrete - Planning Details (PDF), Stolberg,Germany: LUCEM GmbH, 2011
  5. ^ Paul, Soumyajit; Dutta, Avik (October 2013). "Translucent Concrete" (PDF). International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications. 3 (10). ISSN 2250-3153.
  6. ^ Huang, B; Mosalam, K.M.; Chiew, S.P. (2013-01-20). "Anidolic Daylight Concentrator of Structural Translucent Concrete Envelope" (PDF). Singapore-Berkeley Building Efficiency and Sustainability in the Tropics.
  7. ^ "See-through concrete: LiTracon". The Future of Design. 2014-11-14.
  8. ^ CA 353849, Bernard Long, "LIGHT TRANSMITTING CONCRETE STRUCTURE", published 1935-10-29 
  9. ^ GB 1561142, David Kenneth & John Richardson, "DECORATIVE WALLS, FLOORS AND CEILINGS" 
  10. ^ DE 3628083, "Bodenplatten aus Balken mit eingelegten Lichtwellenleiter-Sensoren", published 1988-03-03 
  11. ^ DE 9310500U, Uwe Weidmann, "Lichtdurchlässiges Bauelement", published 1993-07-14 
  12. ^ FR 2743135, FRANCOIS ORTH, "BORNES ET AUTRES EQUIPEMENTS PUBLICS OU PRIVES EN BETON OU CIMENT ECLAIRES PAR FIBRES OPTIQUES", published 1995-12-29 
  13. ^ None given (December 3, 2017). "Translucent Concrete: An Emerging Material". Illumin. The Engineering Writing Program at the University of Southern California Viterbi School of Engineering. Retrieved 2017-12-03.
  14. ^ How to see through walls: Transparent concrete is encouraging architects to rethink how they design buildings. The Economist. Sept. 20, 2001.