Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://scidar.kg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/20317
Title: SELF – COMPACTING CONCRETE WITH INDUSTRIAL WASTE MATERIALS AND RECYCLED AGGREGATE AS A SUSTAINABLE MATERIAL
Authors: Despotovic, Iva
Issue Date: 2016
Abstract: Construction industry uses vast amounts of natural resources, simultaneously producing significant amounts of construction waste, so that it has a great impact on the environment. Annual production of concrete in the world has reached 10 billion tons, classifying concrete in the most widely used building material. Having in mind the fact that 70 % of concrete is aggregate, it is clear what the quantity of natural and crushed aggregates requires. Uncontrolled exploitation of aggregates from rivers seriously disrupts aquatic ecosystems and habitats, while the production of crushed natural aggregates increases harmful gas emissions, primarily of CO2, which are responsible for the greenhouse effect. These gases are formed during blasting rocks and during the transportation of aggregates to the usually distant urban areas. One of the solutions of the mentioned problems is recycling deposited building materials, primarily concrete. Because of the uneven quality, the possibility of various impurities to rest during recycling, larger water absorption and lower bulk density, compared to natural aggregates, recycled aggregates require a series of tests and special technology of concrete making. Self-compacting concrete, being innovation in the field of concrete technology, contains a certain amount of powdered materials – fillers. There are various possibilities of selecting this component. If we used any of the industrial by-products, such as fly ash or silica fume, we would solve the problem of depositing these materials, and thus made concrete ecological material. The research subject presented in this paper are properties and technology of self-compacting concrete made with various mineral additives: lime, fly ash, and silica fume, wherein the aggregates used, are both natural and recycled aggregates, obtained by demolition of retaining wall, whose amount is varied in the concrete.
URI: https://scidar.kg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/20317
Type: conferenceObject
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Mechanical and Civil Engineering, Kraljevo

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