Abstract

In the cement industry, utilization of a sustainable binder that has a lower energy consumption and carbon dioxide (CO2) emission than Portland cement is becoming increasingly important. Air lime is a binder that hardens by absorbing CO2 from the atmosphere, and its raw material, hydrated lime, is manufactured at a lower temperature (around 900 °C) than cement (around 1450 °C). In this study, the amount and rate of CO2 uptake by air lime-based materials are quantitatively evaluated under ambient curing conditions of 20 °C, 60% relative humidity, and 0.04% CO2 concentration. In addition, the effects of the water-to-binder ratio (w/b) and silica fume addition on the material properties of the air lime mortar, such as strength, weight change, carbonation depth, and pore structure, are investigated. Unlike hydraulic materials, such as Portland cement, the air lime mortar did not set and harden under a sealed curing condition, however, once exposed to dry air, the mortar began to harden by absorbing CO2. During the first week, most of the internal water evaporated, thus, the mortar weight was greatly reduced. After that, however, both the weight and the compressive strength consistently increased for at least 180 days due to the carbonation reaction. Based on the 91-day properties, replacing 10% of hydrated lime with silica fume improved the compressive and flexural strengths by 27% and 13% respectively, whereas increasing the w/b from 0.4 to 0.6 decreased both strengths by 29% due to the increased volume of the capillary pores. The addition of silica fume and the change in the w/b had no significant impact on the amount of CO2 uptake, but these two factors were effective in accelerating the CO2 uptake rate before 28 days. Lastly, the air lime-based material was evaluated to be capable of recovering half of the emitted CO2 during the manufacture of hydrated lime within 3 months.

Highlights

  • The cement industry is associated with huge amounts of energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions [1]

  • 7% of carbon dioxide (CO2 ) emissions [2], which is mostly attributed to the manufacture of Portland cement, which requires a very high temperature of 1400 ◦ C–1500 ◦ C [3]

  • Air lime-based materials harden while absorbing the CO2 emitted during the production of hydrated lime

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Summary

Introduction

The cement industry is associated with huge amounts of energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions [1]. It consumes 2%–3% of global energy consumption and is responsible for about. Energies 2019, 12, 2903 clinkers are urgently required in the field of construction materials. In this context, the widespread use of clinker-free binders based on industrial byproducts, such as fly ash, various types of slag (ground granulated blast-furnace slag, steel slag, and magnesium slag), and studies on their CO2 uptake capacity have received much attention [6,7]. Recent studies on the CO2 uptake of building materials have examined the properties related to the carbonation reaction, such as strength development, carbonation depth, and weight change under atmospheric CO2 concentration (i.e., around 0.04%) rather than under accelerated carbonation conditions

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