Abstract

The ordinary Portland cement is a main binding material in normal concrete or high-performance fiber cementitious composites. However, the carbon dioxide (CO2) emission during the ordinary Portland cement manufacturing process is up to about 7.0% of global manmade CO2. The ordinary Portland cement is also known to have toxic substances. The purpose of current research is to develop a near-environmental and strain-hardening fiber low cementitious composite in which the binder is mixed by replacing 60% of the amount of cement with ground granulated blast-furnace slag with or without using alkali activators, or replacing with fly ash. Five mixture proportions with proper fluidity and viscosity of the composites in order to easily mix fibers and to uniformly disperse fibers were determined according to reducing the amount of cement and replacing it with ground granulated blast-furnace slag with or without alkali activators, or replacing with fly ash. The mechanical characteristics of the strain-hardening fiber low cementitious composite were evaluated experimentally by the slump flow, compression, and direct tension tests. The strain-hardening fiber low cementitious composite exhibited the slump flow of 520–670 mm and the tensile strain capacity of 2.3%−4.8% with multiple micro-cracks.

Highlights

  • From the end of the 20th century, climate change and exhaustion of resources have become a major issue among serious problems that the world is facing

  • In order to prevent global warming and environmental destruction arising from the manufacturing process of cement in the concrete industry, it has been of interest to reduce CO2 discharge, recycle resources, and develop highly durable materials in order to increase the life-cycle of the materials

  • strain-hardening fiber low cementitious composite (SHFLC) were developed as a green cementitious composite low-CO2 emissive and high performance composite

Read more

Summary

Introduction

From the end of the 20th century, climate change and exhaustion of resources have become a major issue among serious problems that the world is facing. A strain-hardening fiber low cementitious composite (SHFLC) was newly developed as a near-environmental and low-CO2 high-ductile composite material by reducing the use of ordinary Portland cement (OPC).

Results
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