I have seen EMT fitting that stated they were listed for use in concrete if they were wrapped in duct tape. It was a long time ago, and I honestly can't remember the name of the manufacturer, but I kind of laughed when I read it.
1984, hotel meridian across from john wayne airport. {Edited to remove the name of the electrical contractor said to be responsible for the installation described below.}
1/2" emt home runs, they'd run 100'+ in a post tension slab,
and then turn down with a red dot 90 above where the panel
would go. they'd turn up wherever, in emt. no GRC where it
would exit the pour. concrete listed fittings. no duct tape.
the concrete paddle machines would grab them during finishing,
and twist them off, leaving the stub looking like the twisted end
of a cigarette that i'm sure the general foreman who thought all
this up was smoking.
3/4" emt home runs, 100' plus, stubbing up into a riser that went
up six floors, feeding that plug in every room. 3/4" emt in the bottom
of the box, 3/4" emt out the top of the box, a 1/2" out the side of the
box to feed a plug down the wall, full house in the bottom, full house
out the top, and a device in the box.... and it's a 104 box.
why no, i'm not a big fan of emt in the slab...... i spent the first two
months working there fixing broken 1/2" emt stubs, and found one
that was tie wired to a post tension cable, that i nicked one day
while dissecting around the emt, not realizing that it was a post tension
cable until it became less tense, all of a sudden.
they make a loud bang, by the way.