RIARTE Home
    • español
    • English
  • English 
    • español
    • English
  • Login
View Item 
  •   RIARTE Home
  • 2. INVESTIGACIÓN CIENTÍFICA
  • Artículos en revistas científicas
  • View Item
  •   RIARTE Home
  • 2. INVESTIGACIÓN CIENTÍFICA
  • Artículos en revistas científicas
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Using recycled aggregate concrete at a precast-concrete plant: A multi-criteria company-oriented feasibility study

Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12251/3006
View/Open: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85137181403&doi=10.1016%2fj.jclepro.2022.133873&partnerID=40&md5=158ae969cd4b2a8f9fa0608569bba277
ISSN: 0959-6526
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2022.133873
Share
Statistics
View Usage Statistics
Metadata
Show full item record
Author
Revilla Cuesta, Víctor; Fiol Oliván, Francisco; Perumal, P.; Ortega López, Vanesa; Manso, J. M. [et al.]
Date
2022
Subject/s

Durabilidad

Áridos reciclados

Ensayos (propiedades o materiales)

Material de construcción

Material sostenible

Resistencia mecánica

Propiedades mecánicas

Prefabricados

Hormigón prefabricado

Unesco Subject/s

3305.05 Tecnología del Hormigón

3313.04 Material de Construcción

3308.02 Residuos Industriales

3312.08 Propiedades de Los Materiales

3312.09 Resistencia de Materiales

3312.12 Ensayo de Materiales

Abstract

Numerous test results at laboratory scale confirm the utility of Recycled Aggregate (RA) for the development of concrete that demonstrates durability and adequate in-fresh and mechanical behavior. However, feasibility evaluations of the use of RA in real industrial applications are necessary, before any large-scale industrial application of these products can begin. In this research, the feasibility of producing precast-concrete components containing large amounts of coarse RA at a precast-concrete plant is analyzed. Two Self-Compacting Concretes (SCC) were produced incorporating 0% and 100% coarse RA, respectively, at both laboratory scale (0.08 m3) and industrial scale (2 m3). Work took place at the industrial-scale facilities of a precast-concrete company that was collaborating in this study. Flowability and mechanical behavior were maintained as concrete production volumes increased, and concrete strength even increased after adding coarse RA, due to a careful mix design. However, the durability performance worsened by around 20% when produced at industrial scale, being this worsening higher whether coarse RA was used. A Multi-Criteria Decision-Making (MCDM) analysis, in which the criteria of the precast-concrete company defined the relative importance of each concrete property, showed the feasibility of manufacturing precast-SCC components containing coarse RA for interior usage, whose fundamental requirement is adequate mechanical strength. The results of the MCDM analysis also underlined the lower cost of coarse RA, making its use in SCC components cast with large concrete volumes advisable. Overall, the addition of coarse RA in the precast-concrete industry is recommended in the interests of a greener construction sector. © 2022 The Authors

Numerous test results at laboratory scale confirm the utility of Recycled Aggregate (RA) for the development of concrete that demonstrates durability and adequate in-fresh and mechanical behavior. However, feasibility evaluations of the use of RA in real industrial applications are necessary, before any large-scale industrial application of these products can begin. In this research, the feasibility of producing precast-concrete components containing large amounts of coarse RA at a precast-concrete plant is analyzed. Two Self-Compacting Concretes (SCC) were produced incorporating 0% and 100% coarse RA, respectively, at both laboratory scale (0.08 m3) and industrial scale (2 m3). Work took place at the industrial-scale facilities of a precast-concrete company that was collaborating in this study. Flowability and mechanical behavior were maintained as concrete production volumes increased, and concrete strength even increased after adding coarse RA, due to a careful mix design. However, the durability performance worsened by around 20% when produced at industrial scale, being this worsening higher whether coarse RA was used. A Multi-Criteria Decision-Making (MCDM) analysis, in which the criteria of the precast-concrete company defined the relative importance of each concrete property, showed the feasibility of manufacturing precast-SCC components containing coarse RA for interior usage, whose fundamental requirement is adequate mechanical strength. The results of the MCDM analysis also underlined the lower cost of coarse RA, making its use in SCC components cast with large concrete volumes advisable. Overall, the addition of coarse RA in the precast-concrete industry is recommended in the interests of a greener construction sector. © 2022 The Authors

Collections
  • Artículos en revistas científicas

Browse

All of RIARTECommunities and CollectionsAuthorsTitlesSubjectsUnesco subjectsTypes of documentsThis CollectionAuthorsTitlesSubjectsUnesco subjectsTypes of documents

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Help

About RIARTEFAQLocate informationPoliciesPolítica de Protección de Datos

OA Publishing Policies

Logo SHERPA/RoMEOLogo Dulcinea

Content diffusion

Logo RecolectaLogo Hispana

Copyright © Spanish General Council of Technical Architecture 2018 | Legal notice | Política de Protección de Datos

Facebook
Twitter
Contact Us Send Feedback