Abstract

Approximately 7 million tons of fly ash and slag are produced in thermal power plants in Serbia every year, only 3% of which is used in the cement industry. About 300 million tons of the ash-slag mixture are disposed in landfills, occupying an area of approximately 1600 hectares and generating environmental issues. Fly ash from Serbian power plants has pozzolanic properties and due to low concentration of calcium compounds (less than 10% CaO), they do not have self-cementing properties. According to the ASTM C618-15, this ash is from class F. According to the European Standard EN 197-1:2011, this ash is siliceous (type V) ash. From April 2014 to May 2015, an investigation of engineering properties of fly ash and mixtures of fly ash and slag from landfill (without or with binders of cement/lime) was conducted at the Laboratory of Soil Mechanics at the Faculty of Civil Engineering of the University of Belgrade (Serbia) and at the Institute for Testing of Materials – IMS Institute in Belgrade. The laboratory test results were showed in the study ‘Utilization of fly ash and slag produced in the TPP JP EPS thermal power plants for construction of railways’. Four kinds of waste materials from Serbian power plants were laboratory tested: (a) an ash-slag mixture from landfills at the ‘Nikola Tesla A’ thermal power plant; (b) fly ash from silos in the ‘Nikola Tesla B’ thermal power plant; (c) an ash-slag mixture from landfills at the ‘Kostolac A’ and ‘Kostolac B’ thermal power plants and ‘Srednje kostolačko ostrvo’ landfill; (d) fly ash from the ‘Kostolac’ thermal power plant. The following physical and mechanical properties of ash and mixtures were investigated: grain size distribution, Atterberg limits, specific gravity, moisture-density relationship, shear strength parameters in terms of effective stresses, California Bearing Ratio (CBR), and deformation parameters. The paper presents the results of laboratory tests of the materials with and without binders, and based on the laboratory results and previous research, the paper presents possibilities of using fly ash and slag for the construction of railway substructure in the planned construction and reconstruction of railway network in Serbia. The obtained results indicate that tested fly ash and ash-slag mixture have met the technical requirements and that they have the potential to be used in railway substructure.

Highlights

  • Two European traffic corridors pass through the Republic of Serbia: the Danube Corridor VII and the roadrailway Corridor X (Fig. 1)

  • The testing samples for the investigation of the mechanical properties were prepared at optimum moisture content by Standard compaction Proctor test

  • Friction angles of tested ash-slag mixture and fly ash are in the range of sand and gravel

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Summary

Introduction

Two European traffic corridors pass through the Republic of Serbia: the Danube Corridor VII and the roadrailway Corridor X (Fig. 1). Corridor VII (the river Danube) connects Central Europe with the Black Sea via the Republic of Serbia and represents a part of the South East multi-modal axis. Corridor X with its branches – Xb (Belgrade–Budapest) and Xc (Nis–Sofia), represents the most significant road-railway route on the territory of the Republic of Serbia. It was established as a part of the South East multi-modal axis, linking Austria/Hungary, Slovenia/Croatia, the Republic of Serbia and Bulgaria/Macedonia/Greece and covers 760 km of railway lines in the Republic of Serbia.

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