Use of recycled tires in non-structural concrete

This research addresses the issue of tire waste management and natural aggregate resource depletion. It investigates use of commercially produced recycled tire rubber as replacement for fine and coarse aggregate in non-structural concrete. Two replacement levels of 10% and 20% were considered for fi...

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Main Authors: Al Rawahi Zamzam, Bilal Waris Muhammad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2017-01-01
Series:MATEC Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201712003002
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spelling doaj-db46ca18756f4b058b003fc984d792d32021-02-02T00:08:34ZengEDP SciencesMATEC Web of Conferences2261-236X2017-01-011200300210.1051/matecconf/201712003002matecconf_ascm2017_03002Use of recycled tires in non-structural concreteAl Rawahi Zamzam0Bilal Waris Muhammad1Sultan Qaboos University, Department of Civil and Arch. EngineeringSultan Qaboos University, Department of Civil and Arch. EngineeringThis research addresses the issue of tire waste management and natural aggregate resource depletion. It investigates use of commercially produced recycled tire rubber as replacement for fine and coarse aggregate in non-structural concrete. Two replacement levels of 10% and 20% were considered for fine aggregate with 0% or 10% of coarse aggregate. The study employed a mix proportion of 1:5:4 (cement: fine aggregate: coarse aggregate) with a water-to-cement ratio of 0.25, which is normally utilized in concrete block manufacturing in Oman. The mixes were tested for their thermal conductivity, water absorption and compressive strength. The behavior of mixes exposed to 100 and 200°C was also studied and the samples were later tested for compressive strength. The results showed improvements in compressive strength after exposure to heat. Thermal conductivity was reduced as the percentage replacement increased for both fine and coarse aggregate. During heat exposure, the temperature rise was faster in rubberized mixes, and the compressive strength of all mixes improved after the exposure to heat. Water absorption and void content increased with increase in replacement percentage. The compressive strength did not show a clear trend with the replacement and this is due to the sensitivity of the stiff mix used in the study and its inherent lean nature. The results indicate that the lean nature of the mix makes it insensitive to small replacement investigated in this research.https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201712003002
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Al Rawahi Zamzam
Bilal Waris Muhammad
spellingShingle Al Rawahi Zamzam
Bilal Waris Muhammad
Use of recycled tires in non-structural concrete
MATEC Web of Conferences
author_facet Al Rawahi Zamzam
Bilal Waris Muhammad
author_sort Al Rawahi Zamzam
title Use of recycled tires in non-structural concrete
title_short Use of recycled tires in non-structural concrete
title_full Use of recycled tires in non-structural concrete
title_fullStr Use of recycled tires in non-structural concrete
title_full_unstemmed Use of recycled tires in non-structural concrete
title_sort use of recycled tires in non-structural concrete
publisher EDP Sciences
series MATEC Web of Conferences
issn 2261-236X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description This research addresses the issue of tire waste management and natural aggregate resource depletion. It investigates use of commercially produced recycled tire rubber as replacement for fine and coarse aggregate in non-structural concrete. Two replacement levels of 10% and 20% were considered for fine aggregate with 0% or 10% of coarse aggregate. The study employed a mix proportion of 1:5:4 (cement: fine aggregate: coarse aggregate) with a water-to-cement ratio of 0.25, which is normally utilized in concrete block manufacturing in Oman. The mixes were tested for their thermal conductivity, water absorption and compressive strength. The behavior of mixes exposed to 100 and 200°C was also studied and the samples were later tested for compressive strength. The results showed improvements in compressive strength after exposure to heat. Thermal conductivity was reduced as the percentage replacement increased for both fine and coarse aggregate. During heat exposure, the temperature rise was faster in rubberized mixes, and the compressive strength of all mixes improved after the exposure to heat. Water absorption and void content increased with increase in replacement percentage. The compressive strength did not show a clear trend with the replacement and this is due to the sensitivity of the stiff mix used in the study and its inherent lean nature. The results indicate that the lean nature of the mix makes it insensitive to small replacement investigated in this research.
url https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201712003002
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AT bilalwarismuhammad useofrecycledtiresinnonstructuralconcrete
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