In order for Bamboo or any other biomass to break down, you need oxygen, water and or microorganisms. None of those should be available within concrete in any measure close to being able to degrade the bamboo. The bamboo in this concrete actually replaces the normally used steel rebar, although you need more volume of bamboo to achieve the required strength to be equivalent to that of steel, the cost is orders of magnitude lower and often quasi free. Bamboo reinforcement is not as strong under pressure or perpendicular to the fibers, but it's tensile strength along the fibers is amazing for its cost. And a round tank as this only needs tensile strength from the reinforcement because of the circular design, so bamboo is perfect for this.
@@waitingformyclone119 Thank you for the response. I was under the impression that the cement's alkaline degraded wood it was in contact with over time
@@waitingformyclone119woww! very well said. thanks for sharing your knowledge, i am convinced now to do the same in my farm, i have Giant bamboos to use for this kind of project. And thank you so much Jon Jandai for this video, your idea help me a lot.