Abstract

Cemented pastefill is one of the most popular backfill types that use waste mill tailings to backfill and stabilise the mined-out voids in underground mines. Cement dosage in the range of 3–7% is added to the tailings to increase the strength of cemented pastefill to serve as wall support when extracting adjacent stopes. Cement is expensive and contributes significantly to the cost of backfilling even with small dosages. Moreover, the production of cement is energy intensive and contributes to the emission of carbon dioxide. Partial replacement of cement with supplementary cementitious materials can significantly reduce cost and make mine backfilling more environmentally friendly. This paper reports the findings from a laboratory test programme on the optimization of mix designs using fly ash, slag, pitchstone fines, and polycarboxylate plasticizer. Results indicated that apart from common pozzolans like fly ash and slag, the pitchstone fines attained comparable unconfined compressive strength when replacing cement by 10–20%. The findings are useful for the mining and civil industries trying to dispose the mine waste or reusing it as backfill or as construction material.

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