Dr. R. Chitra
Assistant Professor, Department of Civil Engineering,
Government College of Technology, Coimbatore, Tamilnadu, India
ABSTRACT
Worldwide, cities generate about 1.3 billion Tonnes of solid waste per year.
Building materials account for about half of all materials used and about half the
solid waste generated worldwide. The waste, generated in the construction,
maintenance, repair and disposal phases of a building, is called Construction and
Demolition (C&D) Waste. Management of C&D waste is a problem faced not only in
India but by the global community and quantum of waste produced occupies a huge
fraction of the total solid waste generation by mass. Furthermore, a continued
environmental awareness instigates the pressure for reuse of construction materials
instead of classifying them as waste materials. Using construction waste material as
an aggregate for developing new concrete product is technically viable and may, in
some circumstances, be environmentally beneficial. The recent government initiative
to stop sand mining insists the need to recycle, reuse and substitute natural aggregates
in order to ensure environmental sustainability.
This research work aims at making one such experiment where recycled
aggregates are produced from C&D waste thus paves a way, for the effective
management of concrete debris.
The concrete waste was collected from the waste yard in the college campus,
segregated, crushed in jaw crusher, sieved, washed and used for concreting for a mix
proportion of M25, as a replacement for natural course aggregates in proportions of
0%, 30%, 60% and 100%. On testing, the compressive strength was found to be
increasing and split tensile strength and flexural strength were observed to be nearly
equal to that of normal concrete mix. Therefore, use of recycled concrete aggregate
showed acceptable performance with respect to mechanical properties.
The recycled aggregates obtained from waste concrete are more angular and have
higher absorption and specific gravity than natural coarse aggregates and it resulted
in increased strength and improved load carrying capacity. However, further studies
to determine the effect on durability and improvement on workability are necessary.
Key words: C&D waste, Recycled aggregate, Fineness modulus, Slump test, Specific
gravity.
Cite this Article: Dr. K. Ramadevi and Dr. R. Chitra, Concrete Using Recycled
Aggregates. International Journal of Civil Engineering and Technology, 8(9), 2017,
pp. 413–419.
http://www.iaeme.com/IJCIET/issues.asp?JType=IJCIET&VType=8&IType=9
1. INTRODUCTION
Concrete is the premier construction material across the world and the most widely used in all
types of civil engineering works. Among the ingredients for concrete, aggregates, i.e. inert
granular materials such as sand, crushed stone or gravel form the major part. In recent years
due to continued large scale extraction, use of aggregates from natural resources has been
questioned at an international level. This is mainly because of the running down of quality
primary aggregates and greater awareness of environmental protection. Hence the use of
recycled aggregate from construction and demolition waste (C&D waste) in concrete is
gaining momentum these days. Recycled aggregate concrete may become the need of the day
in the years to come.
2. RECYCLED AGGREGATES
The main source for recycled aggregates is construction and demolition waste. Most of the
waste materials produced by demolishing structures are disposed by dumping them as landfill
or for reclaiming land. But with the demand for land increasing day by day, the locations,
capacity and width of the land that can receive waste materials are becoming limited. Added
to it, the cost of transportation makes disposal a major problem. Hence, reuse of demolition
waste appears to be an effective solution and the most appropriate and large-scale use would
be to use it as aggregates to produce concrete for new construction. Recycled aggregate
concrete utilizes demolition material from concrete and burnt clay brick masonry construction
as aggregate.
4. OBJECTIVES
To replace natural coarse aggregate by the recycled coarse aggregate in various percentages
(0%, 30%, 60% and 100%)
To study and compare the mechanical properties - compressive strength, split tensile
strength, flexural strength of hardened concrete specimens with and without recycled
aggregates
5. MATERIALS USED
The materials used are PPC cement of grade 43, River sand of size passing through 4.75 mm
IS sieve and retaining on 150 micron IS sieve, natural coarse aggregate & recycled coarse
aggregates size 20mm and 12.5mm is used in the ratio 60:40 and potable water available in
the campus. The collected waste specimens are shown in Figure 1 and the recycled aggregates
are shown in Figure 2.
Where,
P = compressive load on cylinder in N
3Pa
fb
If a < 13.3 cm,
b d2
Where,
b = Breath of beam (mm),
d = Height of beam (mm)
a = Distance of crack from shorter length of beam (mm)
l = Length of the prism (mm)
The result of flexural strength test is shown in Figure 5.
5
4.5
4
12. CONCLUSIONS
In this study it is found that there is not much variation in strength between ordinary concrete
and 30% replaced aggregate concrete, which proves the previous works.
But when the percentage of aggregate replaced increases there is a constant increase in
strengths, which is a controversy to the previous works.
Because it has been found that recycled aggregates obtained from recycling concrete are more
angular and have higher absorption and specific gravity than natural coarse aggregates it may
result on increase of strength and improved load carrying capacity.
However, further studies to determine the effect on durability and improvement on workability
are necessary.
REFERENCES
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