Abstract

Recently, interest in environmentally friendly development has increased worldwide, especially in the construction industry. In this study, blast furnace slag powder (BFSP) and mixed steel fine aggregates were applied to cement mortars to reduce the environmental damage caused by the extraction of natural aggregate and to increase the recycling rate of steel by-products in the construction industry. We investigated the fluidity, compressive strength, tensile strength, accelerated carbonation depth, and chloride ion penetration resistance of mortars with steel slag aggregate and their dependence on the presence or absence of BFSP. Because the recycling rate of ferronickel slag is low and causes environmental problems, we considered mortar samples with mixed fine aggregates containing blast furnace slag fine aggregate (BSA) and ferronickel slag fine aggregate (FSA). The results showed that the 7-day compressive strength of a sample containing both 25% BSA and 25% FSA was nearly 14.8% higher than that of the control sample. This trend is likely due to the high density and angular shape of steel slag particles. The 56-day compressive strength of the sample with BFSP and 50% FSA was approximately 64.9 MPa, which was higher than that of other samples with BFSP. In addition, the chloride ion penetrability test result indicates that the use of BFSP has a greater effect than the use of steel slag aggregate on the chloride ion penetration resistance of mortar. Thus, the substitute rate of steel slag as aggregate can be substantially enhanced if BFSP and steel slag aggregate are used in an appropriate combination.

Highlights

  • Accepted: 5 October 2021Recently, the interest in environmentally friendly development has increased worldwide, especially in the construction industry

  • In the concrete industry that consumes a large amount of aggregate, the combined use of mixed steel slag aggregate and blast furnace slag powder (BFSP) is expected to alleviate the problem of aggregate shortage and to considerably increase the recycling rate of steel by-products that can cause environmental pollution

  • A natural fine aggregate (NFA), blast furnace slag fine aggregate (BSA), and ferronickel slag aggregate (FSA) supplied by POSCO, Korea, were used

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The interest in environmentally friendly development has increased worldwide, especially in the construction industry. If the use of the discarded ferronickel slag as an aggregate can be enhanced, it can have multiple advantages in alleviating the problem of insufficient aggregate for mortar or concrete and preventing environmental pollution caused by steel by-products. We applied combinations of blast furnace slag aggregate (BSA) and ferronickel slag aggregate (FSA) to mortar to alleviate the problem of aggregate shortage and to increase the recycling rate of steel slag, including ferronickel slag. In the concrete industry that consumes a large amount of aggregate, the combined use of mixed steel slag aggregate and BFSP is expected to alleviate the problem of aggregate shortage and to considerably increase the recycling rate of steel by-products that can cause environmental pollution. In this study, we investigated the fluidity, compressive strength, tensile strength, accelerated carbonation depth, and chloride ion penetration resistance of mortar with mixed steel slag aggregate containing FSA and BSA and their dependence on the presence or absence of BFSP

Materials
Mixing Proportions and Specimen Preparation
Chemical
Mortar
Compressive Strength
Compressive
Tensile
Accelerated Carbonation Depth
Chloride
The 7-days strength theaggregate
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call