Pre Construction Anti Termite Treatment And Procedure
What is Pre Construction termite treatment?
Pre Construction Anti Termite treatment is performed
prior to the completion of the building. The soil, building pillars, and other
joints are treated with chemicals to prevent termites in this anti-termite
treatment.
The most effective
technique to avoid termite attack in buildings or residences is to apply
anti-termite treatment before to construction. Chemicals are used to treat the
soil beneath the foundation. To keep termites out of the structure, a chemical
barrier is created between the ground and the foundation brickwork.
WHY ANTI TERMITE IS
PERFORMED OR DONE?
The pre-constructional soil treatment
must be applied up to the plinth level of the substructure during construction.
It includes soil
treatment with authorised chemicals in water emulsion in foundation trenches
for columns, plinth beams, plinth filling, wall-floor joints, expansion joints,
and other stages as specified in IS 6313 Part-II 2013.
TIME OF APPLICATION
OR WHEN TO APPLY ANTI TERMITE PROCEDURE ON SOIL:
·
Soil treatment for anti termite should begin when foundation trenches
and pits are ready.
·
After the chemical emulsion has been absorbed by the soil and the
surface is completely dry, mass concrete should be laid.
·
When it is raining or the soil is wet with rain or sub-soil water,
treatment should be avoided.
·
The above rules also apply to the treatment of the filled earth surface
inside the plinth area prior to installing the floor subgrade.
·
The treated soil barriers must not be disturbed once they have been
established.
·
If treated soil barriers are accidentally disrupted, immediate actions
must be taken to restore the barrier system’s continuity and completeness.
Procedure For Pre
Construction Anti Termite Treatment:
The surface of the ground should be dry
and clean.
The chemical should be injected three
times in a certain order into the ground.
Firstly, the earth’s surface shall be
drilled in 12mm diameter and 300mm deep at 150mm intervals below the PPC. The
chemical should be administered at a rate of 5 litres per square metre.
Secondly, the building’s
substructure, which is surrounded by earth, must be treated with the chemical
at a rate of 7.5 Liters per square metre. The chemical will be injected 450mm
deep and 150mm away from the substructure at this point.
Lastly, before
installing the flooring, the inner plinth wall section should be backfilled
with good soil and properly compacted. As previously stated, the chemical
treatment will be completed at a rate of 5 litres per sqm.
What is Chemical
Barrier in Pre Construction Anti termite treatment?
The layer of
chemically treated soil that comes into direct contact with a building’s
foundation and floor structure and kills or repels termites, producing a
termite-proof barrier.
What is Soil
Treatment in Pre Construction Anti termite treatment?
Soil Treatment is a method where Anti
termite chemicals are applied to the soil next to and beneath a
structure as part of a chemical barrier that is either fatal or repellant to
termites.
This is a method in
which a building’s soil is treated with chemicals during the early stages of
development.
Anti Termite
treatment for RCC Foundation:
The treatment of reinforced cement
concrete (RCC) foundations must be at a depth of 500mm below the ground level,
unless the ground level is increased or decreased after the foundations have
been cast by filling or cutting.
The 500mm depth should be calculated
using the new soil level created by the above-mentioned filling or cutting, as
well as soil in direct contact with the RCC vertical surface.
The rate of
treatment for foundations is 7.5 litre per square meter.
Anti Termite
treatment for foundation trenches made for Masonry walls & Basement:
The chemical should
be applied to the bottom surface of the foundation and the foundation sides up
to a height of about 300 mm of excavations created from masonry foundations and
basements at a rate of 5 litres per square metre of surface area.
Anti Termite
Treatment to Vertical Backfilled Soil along masonry Foundation/ retaining wall:
The backfill in contact with the
foundation structure must be treated at a rate of 7.5 litres per square metre
of the vertical surface of the sub-structure for each side of the foundation
after the masonry foundations and basement retaining walls have been constructed.
The soil filling is
done in layers, and the treatment is done in steps as well. The chemical
solution must be applied to the masonry surfaces so that the ground in contact
with them is adequately treated.
Anti Termite
treatment of top Surface of Plinth Filling:
Before the sand bed or subgrade is
placed, the top surface of the consolidated earth inside plinth walls must be
treated with chemical emulsion at a rate of 5 l/m2.
This treatment must also be applied
to the DPC installed on the plinth wall.
If the filled earth
has been sufficiently compacted and the emulsion is not seeping into the soil,
holes up to 50 to 75 mm deep at 150 mm centres both ways can be drilled on the
surface with 12 mm diameter mild steel rod to allow the chemical emulsion to
sweep into the soil.
Anti Termite
treatment at Junction of the wall and the floor:
A short channel is used to carry out
the anti-termite treatment at the wall’s junction. The rod holes in the channel
up to the ground level 150 mm apart and the iron rod should be moved in
backward and forward to create hole in the earth and chemical emulsion poured
along the wall at the rate of 7.5 l/m2 of vertical wall or at the column
surface so chemical will reach the soil right to the bottom (this must be done
before laying the sub-grade).
After the
anti-termite treatment is finished, the soil should be compacted well.
Anti Termite
treatment of Soil along External Perimeter of Building:
After the
construction is finished, the soil along the building’s external perimeter
should be rodded at 150 mm intervals and to a depth of 300 mm. To make holes in
the compacted earth, the rods should be pushed back and forth parallel to the
wall in the earth, and chemical emulsion should be poured along the wall at a
rate of 7.5 litre per square metre of the vertical surface. The ground should
be compacted after the treatment.
Anti Termite
treatment of Soil Surrounding Pipes, Wastes and Conduits:
When external work
such as pipes, wastes, and conduits contact the soil inside the foundations,
the soil surrounding each such pipe, waste, or conduit must be loosened for a
distance of 150 mm and to a depth of 75 mm before treatment may begin. When
pipes, wastes, and conduits penetrate the soil outside the foundation, they
must be treated identically at a distance of above 300 mm unless they are 75 mm
clear of the building’s walls.
Anti Termite
treatment for Expansion Joints:
When doing the therapy below, pay specific
attention to the soil underlying these joints. After the sub-grade has been
placed, this treatment should be extended by treating through the expansion
joints at a rate of 2 litres per linear metre.
For More Info:- Termite
Control
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