Effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concrete

Abstract Researchers have continuously attempted to reduce and recycle construction waste. Ceramic waste is mainly a byproduct of the manufacturing process. About 25% of the waste is produced because of dimension defects or incurring problems throughout the industrial process. This article aims to h...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ali Jihad Hamad, Rami Joseph Aghajan Sldozian, Zoya A. Mikhaleva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-03-01
Series:Engineering Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12134
id doaj-5d26fab0db0d43caaf50319306ae218d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5d26fab0db0d43caaf50319306ae218d2020-11-25T03:31:06ZengWileyEngineering Reports2577-81962020-03-0123n/an/a10.1002/eng2.12134Effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concreteAli Jihad Hamad0Rami Joseph Aghajan Sldozian1Zoya A. Mikhaleva2Construction Materials Technology Engineering Department Engineering Technical College of Mosul, Northern Technical University Mosul IraqDepartment of Technology and Methods of Nanoproducts Manufacturing Tambov State Technical University Tambov RussiaDepartment of Technology and Methods of Nanoproducts Manufacturing Tambov State Technical University Tambov RussiaAbstract Researchers have continuously attempted to reduce and recycle construction waste. Ceramic waste is mainly a byproduct of the manufacturing process. About 25% of the waste is produced because of dimension defects or incurring problems throughout the industrial process. This article aims to highlight the alternative uses of ceramic waste. In this research, ceramic waste at a powder status is reduced to fine aggregates. Here, ceramic waste powder (CWP) is used in different ratios of 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% replacing the fine aggregate weight. Aluminum powder is used to obtain aerated concrete (AC). Glass fibers are added in ratios of 1%, 1.5%, and 2% of cement weight to obtain a fiber‐reinforced AC. The unit weight, compressive strength, splitting tensile strength, and thermal conductivity are estimated. Furthermore, scanning electron microscopy is performed to investigate the microstructure features of the composite. The results exhibit better performance in compressive and splitting tensile strength when fine aggregates were replaced by 25% and 50% of CWP. In addition, 1.5% of GFs enhance the compressive and splitting tensile strength. In addition, increasing the CWP decreases the unit weight of fiber‐reinforced AC. It is shown that CWP strongly influences the thermal conductivity of the fiber‐reinforced AC, resulting in a high composite resistant to heat transmission. The technique for order preference by similarity to an ideal solution method is used to obtain the optimal mix.https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12134aerated concreteceramic waste powderfiber reinforcedglass fiberslightweight concretethermal conductivity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ali Jihad Hamad
Rami Joseph Aghajan Sldozian
Zoya A. Mikhaleva
spellingShingle Ali Jihad Hamad
Rami Joseph Aghajan Sldozian
Zoya A. Mikhaleva
Effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concrete
Engineering Reports
aerated concrete
ceramic waste powder
fiber reinforced
glass fibers
lightweight concrete
thermal conductivity
author_facet Ali Jihad Hamad
Rami Joseph Aghajan Sldozian
Zoya A. Mikhaleva
author_sort Ali Jihad Hamad
title Effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concrete
title_short Effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concrete
title_full Effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concrete
title_fullStr Effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concrete
title_full_unstemmed Effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concrete
title_sort effect of ceramic waste powder as partial fine aggregate replacement on properties of fiber‐reinforced aerated concrete
publisher Wiley
series Engineering Reports
issn 2577-8196
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Abstract Researchers have continuously attempted to reduce and recycle construction waste. Ceramic waste is mainly a byproduct of the manufacturing process. About 25% of the waste is produced because of dimension defects or incurring problems throughout the industrial process. This article aims to highlight the alternative uses of ceramic waste. In this research, ceramic waste at a powder status is reduced to fine aggregates. Here, ceramic waste powder (CWP) is used in different ratios of 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% replacing the fine aggregate weight. Aluminum powder is used to obtain aerated concrete (AC). Glass fibers are added in ratios of 1%, 1.5%, and 2% of cement weight to obtain a fiber‐reinforced AC. The unit weight, compressive strength, splitting tensile strength, and thermal conductivity are estimated. Furthermore, scanning electron microscopy is performed to investigate the microstructure features of the composite. The results exhibit better performance in compressive and splitting tensile strength when fine aggregates were replaced by 25% and 50% of CWP. In addition, 1.5% of GFs enhance the compressive and splitting tensile strength. In addition, increasing the CWP decreases the unit weight of fiber‐reinforced AC. It is shown that CWP strongly influences the thermal conductivity of the fiber‐reinforced AC, resulting in a high composite resistant to heat transmission. The technique for order preference by similarity to an ideal solution method is used to obtain the optimal mix.
topic aerated concrete
ceramic waste powder
fiber reinforced
glass fibers
lightweight concrete
thermal conductivity
url https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12134
work_keys_str_mv AT alijihadhamad effectofceramicwastepowderaspartialfineaggregatereplacementonpropertiesoffiberreinforcedaeratedconcrete
AT ramijosephaghajansldozian effectofceramicwastepowderaspartialfineaggregatereplacementonpropertiesoffiberreinforcedaeratedconcrete
AT zoyaamikhaleva effectofceramicwastepowderaspartialfineaggregatereplacementonpropertiesoffiberreinforcedaeratedconcrete
_version_ 1724573594147618816