Shotcrete

The concrete or mortar is formulated to be sticky and resist flowing when at rest to allow use on walls and ceilings, but exhibit sufficient shear thinning to be easily plumbable through hoses.

Shotcrete has the characteristics of high compressive strength, good durability, water tightness and frost resistance.

[3] He used the method of blowing dry material out of a hose with compressed air, injecting water at the nozzle as it was released.

F. Trubee Davison covered this and other Akeley inventions in a special issue of Natural History magazine.

Advantages of the dry mix process are that the water content can be adjusted instantaneously by the nozzle operator, allowing more effective placement in overhead and vertical applications without using accelerators.

The wet-process procedure generally produces less rebound, waste (when material falls to the floor), and dust compared to the dry-mix process.

[5] Gunite was originally a trademarked name that specifically referred to the dry-mix pneumatic cement application process.

Other manufacturers were thus compelled to use other terminology to describe the process such as shotcrete, pneumatic concrete, guncrete, etc.

Shotcrete is an all-inclusive term for spraying concrete or mortar with either a dry or wet mix process.

It may be employed, in concert with lagging and other forms of earth anchor, to stabilize an excavation for an underground parking structure or hi-rise buildings during construction.

Development of decline pathway to go underground is critical for movement of heavy machinery, miners, and material.

Early cement gun, Sydney 1914
A building worker is spraying shotcrete on welded wire mesh
Shotcrete nozzle with 75 mm concrete hose from line pump and 20 mm compressed air line.
Shotcrete swimming pool under construction in Northern Australia
A 76 mm borehole in fibre-reinforced shotcrete on a tunnel wall
A shotcrete curvelinear wall at the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw , Poland
Shotcrete-stabilized cliff above a motorway in New Zealand