Durable Structural Recycled Concrete for Different Exposure Environments.

Materials (Basel)

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Campus Nord, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya·Barcelona TECH, 08034 Barcelona, Spain.

Published: January 2025


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

In this work, the influence of limited percentages of coarse (CRCA) and fine (FRCA) recycled concrete aggregates (Type A recycled aggregates) on the durability properties of structural concrete was analyzed. Concretes were designed using 50% and 60% CRCA with simultaneous additions of 0%, 10%, and 20% FRCA and different types of cement (CEM II/AL 42.5 R, CEM II/AS 42.5 N/SRC, and CEM III/B 42.5 N-LH/SR). Recycled aggregate concrete (RAC) and natural aggregate concrete (NAC) mixtures were produced with similar compressive strength using effective water-cement ratios of 0.47 and 0.5. The drying shrinkage values and durability properties were determined, and they included the chloride permeability, chloride penetration depth, and accelerated and natural carbonation rates. The findings revealed that RAC produced using CEM III/B, which included the mixture produced with 60% coarse RCA and 20% fine RCA, achieved low chloride ion penetrability (up to 850 Coulombs) and exhibited the lowest chloride diffusion coefficient, approximately 7 × 10. Additionally, the RAC-C60-F20 concretes made with CEM II/AS proved suitable for the XC3 and XC4 exposure environments, guaranteeing a lifespan of 50 and 100 years based on the natural carbonation rate. In addition, the RAC-C60-F20 concrete made with CEM II/AL cement exhibited an adequate natural carbonation rate for XC4 environments, which was between 1.6 and 2.4 units higher than the accelerated carbonation rate. This work validates the use of RAC in XC environments (corrosion induced by carbonation) and XS1 environments (corrosion caused by chlorides from seawater).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11818246PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma18030587DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

natural carbonation
12
carbonation rate
12
recycled concrete
8
exposure environments
8
durability properties
8
cem ii/al
8
cem ii/as
8
cem iii/b
8
aggregate concrete
8
environments corrosion
8

Similar Publications

Background: At the 2020 UN General Assembly, China pledged to peak carbon emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060. However, the traditional social development model has led to increasing carbon emissions annually, highlighting the need to resolve the contradiction between development and carbon reduction. This study examines the relationship between carbon emissions, economy, population, and energy consumption in a specific region to support carbon peak and neutrality goals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The rapid development of industry and agriculture has led to a significant increase in the toxicity and pollution of cadmium (Cd) and lead (Pb) in soil. Consequently, soil remediation employing biochar or modified biochar has emerged as a cost-effective and environmentally sustainable approach to address the issue of heavy metal (HM) ion pollution. PEI-functionalization biochar (PBC) derived from corn straw (PBCC), wood straw (PBCW), and rice straw (PBCR) was synthesized to immobilize Cd and Pb in contaminated acidic yellow soil.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extreme event attribution assesses how climate change affected climate extremes, but typically focuses on single events. Furthermore, these attributions rarely quantify the extent to which anthropogenic actors have contributed to these events. Here we show that climate change made 213 historical heatwaves reported over 2000-2023 more likely and more intense, to which each of the 180 carbon majors (fossil fuel and cement producers) substantially contributed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Perseverance rover has explored and sampled igneous and sedimentary rocks within Jezero Crater to characterize early Martian geological processes and habitability and search for potential biosignatures. Upon entering Neretva Vallis, on Jezero Crater's western edge, Perseverance investigated distinctive mudstone and conglomerate outcrops of the Bright Angel formation. Here we report a detailed geological, petrographic and geochemical survey of these rocks and show that organic-carbon-bearing mudstones in the Bright Angel formation contain submillimetre-scale nodules and millimetre-scale reaction fronts enriched in ferrous iron phosphate and sulfide minerals, likely vivianite and greigite, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF