Abstract

Concrete can be harmful to the environment due to its high energy consumption and CO2 emission and also has a potential crack formation, which can promote a drop in its strength. Therefore, concrete is considered as a non-sustainable material. The mechanisms by which bacterial oxidation of organic carbon can precipitate calcite that may fill the voids and cracks on cement-based materials have been extensively investigated to prevent and heal the micro-cracks formation. Hence, this study focused on utilizing a new alkaliphilic bacterial strain indigenous to an Indonesian site, Lysinibacillus sphaericus strain SKC/VA-1, incorporated with calcium lactate pentahydrate, as a low-cost calcium source, with various bacterial inoculum concentrations. The bacterium was employed in this study due to its ability to adapt to basic pH, thus improving the physical properties and rejuvenating the micro-cracks. Experimentally, the addition of calcium lactate pentahydrate slightly affected the mortar properties. Likewise, bacteria-incorporated mortar exhibited an enhancement in the physical properties of mortar. The highest improvement of mechanical properties (an increase of 45% and 36% for compressive and indirect tensile strength, respectively) was achieved by the addition of calcium lactate pentahydrate incorporated with 10% v/v bacterial inoculum [about 7 × 107 CFU/ml (colony-forming unit/ml)]. The self-healing took place more rapidly on bacterial mortar supplemented with calcium lactate pentahydrate than on the control specimen. XRD analysis demonstrated that the mineralogical composition of self-healing precipitates was primarily dominated by calcite (CaCO3), indicating the capacity of L. sphaericus strain SKC/VA-1 to precipitate calcite through organic carbon oxidation for self-healing the artificial crack on the mortar. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the potential utilization of the bacterium L. sphaericus incorporated with calcium lactate pentahydrate to increase the mortar properties, including its self-healing ability. However, further study with the water-cement ratio variation is required to investigate the possibility of using L. sphaericus and calcium lactate pentahydrate as an alternative method rather than reducing the water-cement ratio to enhance the mortar properties.

Highlights

  • Concrete can be harmful to the environment due to its high energy consumption and ­CO2 emission and has a potential crack formation, which can promote a drop in its strength

  • Researchers at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands reported that alkaliphilic bacteria, such as Bacillus pseudofirmus and Bacillus cohnii, can remediate the cracks while increasing the concrete strength by utilizing the organic carbon, such as calcium lactate, to precipitate calcium carbonate through oxidation ­mechanism[28,29,30]

  • The main aim of this study was to investigate the effect of calcium lactate incorporated with the bacterium L. sphaericus strain SKC/VA-1 and various bacterial cell concentrations on the enhancement of mortar properties and self-healing process

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Summary

Introduction

Concrete can be harmful to the environment due to its high energy consumption and ­CO2 emission and has a potential crack formation, which can promote a drop in its strength. XRD analysis demonstrated that the mineralogical composition of self-healing precipitates was primarily dominated by calcite ­(CaCO3), indicating the capacity of L. sphaericus strain SKC/VA-1 to precipitate calcite through organic carbon oxidation for self-healing the artificial crack on the mortar To our knowledge, this is the first report on the potential utilization of the bacterium L. sphaericus incorporated with calcium lactate pentahydrate to increase the mortar properties, including its self-healing ability. The related previous studies reported significant increase in concrete strength ­parameters[9,18,19,20,21,22] Another MICCP mechanism, nitrate reduction, was investigated for precipitating calcium carbonate under anaerobic c­ ondition[23,24]. These bacterial concretes containing calcium lactate exhibited a slightly higher compressive strength than those containing no calcium lactate (37% for B. megaterium and 33% for B. pasteurii)

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