Abstract

The compressive strength of recycled concrete is acknowledged to be largely conditioned by the incorporation ratio of Recycled Concrete Aggregate (RCA), although that ratio needs to be carefully assessed to optimize the design of structural applications. In this study, Self-Compacting Concrete (SCC) mixes containing 100% coarse RCA and variable amounts, between 0% and 100%, of fine RCA were manufactured and their compressive strengths were tested in the laboratory for a statistical analysis of their strength variations, which exhibited robustness and normality according to the common statistical procedures. The results of the confidence intervals, the one-factor ANalysis Of VAriance (ANOVA), and the Kruskal–Wallis test showed that an increase in fine RCA content did not necessarily result in a significant decrease in strength, although the addition of fine RCA delayed the development of the final strength. The statistical models presented in this research can be used to define the optimum incorporation ratio that would produce the highest compressive strength. Furthermore, the multiple regression models offered accurate estimations of compressive strength, considering the interaction between the incorporation ratio of fine RCA and the curing age of concrete that the two-factor ANOVA revealed. Lastly, the probability distribution predictions, obtained through a log-likelihood analysis, fitted the results better than the predictions based on current standards, which clearly underestimated the compressive strength of SCC manufactured with fine RCA and require adjustment to take full advantage of these recycled materials. This analysis could be carried out on any type of waste and concrete, which would allow one to evaluate the same aspects as in this research and ensure that the use of recycled concrete maximizes both sustainability and strength.

Highlights

  • The varied environmental impacts of the construction sector are often of great magnitude [1], extending to resource-intensive materials [2], widely used in this sector, such as concrete and bituminous mixtures [3]

  • This study evaluated the effect of Having an optimal Self-Compacting Concrete (SCC) with 100% Natural Aggregates (NAs) in the fine fraction and 100% Recycled Concrete Aggregate (RCA) in the coarse fraction, adding fine

  • The compressive strength was subjected to an extensive statistical analysis, which allowed us to evaluate different aspects than the traditional descriptive analysis

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Summary

Introduction

The varied environmental impacts of the construction sector are often of great magnitude [1], extending to resource-intensive materials [2], widely used in this sector, such as concrete and bituminous mixtures [3]. The recovery of waste sub-products for use in construction materials is a widely accepted solution to this problem [4], to reduce these impacts [5], and to minimize dumping in landfill sites [6]. Replacing Natural Aggregates (NAs) with waste sub-products [9] is, likewise, a valid strategy, if the effect of each particular waste is evaluated [10] in order to get a correct mix design of the construction material [11]. The most used by-products are Recycled Concrete Aggregate (RCA) [12]; slag, both in concrete [13] and asphalt mixes [14]; rubber [15]. The presence of altered and potentially contaminated cement particles within the finest fraction [17]

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