Abstract

Alkali-activated mortars and concretes have been gaining increased attention due to their potential for providing a more sustainable alternative to traditional ordinary Portland cement mixtures. In addition, the inclusion of high volumes of recycled materials in these traditional mortars and concretes has been shown to be particularly challenging. The compositions of the mixtures present in this paper were designed to make use of a hybrid alkali-activation model, as they were mostly composed of class F fly ash and calcium-rich precursors, namely, ordinary Portland cement and calcium hydroxide. Moreover, the viability of the addition of fine milled glass wastes and fine limestone powder, as a source of soluble silicates and as a filler, respectively, was also investigated. The optimization criterium for the design of fly ash-based alkali-activated mortar compositions was the maximization of both the compressive strength and environmental performance of the mortars. With this objective, two stages of optimization were conceived: one in which the inclusion of secondary precursors in ambient-cured mortar samples was implemented and, simultaneously, in which the compositions were tested for the determination of short-term compressive strength and another phase containing a deeper study on the effects of the addition of glass wastes on the compressive strength of mortar samples cured for 24 h at 80 °C and tested up to 28 days of curing. Furthermore, in both stages, the effects (on the compressive strength) of the inclusion of construction and demolition recycled aggregates were also investigated. The results show that a heat-cured fly ash-based mortar containing a 1% glass powder content (in relation to the binder weight) and a 10% replacement of natural aggregate for CDRA may display as much as a 28-day compressive strength of 31.4 MPa.

Highlights

  • Introduction iationsReducing the environmental footprint of many of the economic activities that enable human progress is a difficult task

  • The natural world contains delicate equilibriums, which are often incompatible with the scale and nature of human undertakings, and while humanity has been able to ignore this issue for thousands of years, the negative environmental impacts of certain activities of mankind are nowadays so pervasive that their effect can be felt in virtually every aspect of human life

  • As to the analysis of the compositions in terms of their global warming potential, according to the available literature [46], and this property’s impact factors for the constituents of the mortars, in comparison to typical equivalent ordinary Portland cement (OPC)-based mortars, all suggest that these mixtures do not display a meaningful advantage in relation to equivalent OPC mortars in relation to their global warming potential. This investigation focused on the design optimization of fly ash-based activated binders (AAB) mortars, based on the compressive strength performance of these mixtures

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Introduction iationsReducing the environmental footprint of many of the economic activities that enable human progress is a difficult task. The natural world contains delicate equilibriums, which are often incompatible with the scale and nature of human undertakings, and while humanity has been able to ignore this issue for thousands of years, the negative environmental impacts of certain activities of mankind are nowadays so pervasive that their effect can be felt in virtually every aspect of human life. Given the scale at which raw natural resources are consumed, ecosystems are destroyed and pollution is generated by the construction sector, and despite being one of the fundamental tools of human development, this field is one of the primordial targets for intervention, when policies concerning the mitigation of the environmental impacts of human activity are designed. Of construction activities are, on one hand, the selection of materials produced with the help of more sustainable processes, and on the other, the adoption of the use of recycled materials. The urgent need for recycling measures has already been inscribed in the Europe

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
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