An investigation on alkali-activated fly ash pastes modified with quartz powder subjected to elevated temperatures

2016 ◽  
Vol 122 ◽  
pp. 417-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alaa M. Rashad ◽  
Ahmed S. Ouda
Author(s):  
Sajid Khan Afridi ◽  
Vanissorn Vimonsatit

Alkali activated pozzolan are known low carbon cementitious binders which can be used to replace cement. The material is also known as geopolymer because of its three dimensional polymeric chain and ring like structure consisting silica and alumina. A common type of pozzolan used is fly ash because of its rich silica content; therefore the term alkali activated fly-ash based binders is adopted. Despite much research and development of this material, there is no specific standard for design mix proportion. This research used the Taguchi’s design of experiment method to determine the optimum mix proportion of alkali activated fly ash based cement paste and mortar. Four factors were considered in the tests, silica fume, sand to cementitious ratio, liquid to solid ratio, and percentage of superplasticiser. Tests were conducted on the 9 batches of alkali activated fly-ash based paste and mortar samples to determine the compressive strength under ambient condition. Tests were also conducted to determine the residual strength of the samples after exposed to elevated temperatures. ANOVA analysis of the test results revealed the main factors contribution on the tested properties and led to the determination of the optimum design proportion of the factors considered in these tests.


Materials ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 140
Author(s):  
Paraskevi D. Askouni ◽  
Catherine (Corina) G. Papanicolaou ◽  
Lazar Azdejkovic

Limited research has focused on the effect of high temperatures on the textile-reinforced mortar (TRM)-to-masonry bond. In this study, masonry prisms that were furnished with double-layered TRM strips were tested under shear bond conditions after their exposure to 200 °C and 400 °C for 1 h using the single-lap/single-prism setup. A total of four TRM systems were applied sharing the same type of textile –a dry AR glass fiber one– and different matrices: two cementitious matrices, namely a normal-weight (TRCNM) and a lightweight (TRCLM) one, and two counterpart alkali-activated matrices (TRAANM and TRAALM) based on metakaolin and fly ash. Specimens’ exposure to elevated temperatures did not alter their failure mode which was due to the sleeve fibers’ rupture along with core fibers’ slippage from the mortar. The residual bond capacity of the TRM systems decreases almost linearly with increasing exposure temperature. The alkali-activated textile reinforced mortars outperformed their cement-based counterparts in terms of bond strength at every temperature. All systems retained close to 50% of their original shear bond strength after heating at 400 °C. Per the type of binder, lightweight matrices resulted in either comparable (cement-based systems) or better (alkali-activated systems) heat protection at the TRM/masonry interface.


2014 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 24-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Talha Junaid ◽  
Amar Khennane ◽  
Obada Kayali ◽  
Arezki Sadaoui ◽  
Donald Picard ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Subhash Yaragal ◽  
Chethan Kumar B. ◽  
Manoj Uddavolu Abhinav

Purpose To reduce environmental impact caused by excessive use of ordinary Portland cement (OPC) and to mitigate scarcity of base materials such as natural coarse aggregate (NCA), industrial by-products can be carefully used as alternatives to OPC and NCA, in production of concrete. This paper aims to describe the performance of using ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS), fly ash (FA) as a complete replacement to OPC and ferrochrome slag (FCS) as replacement to NCA in production of novel FCS based alkali activated slag/fly ash concretes (AASFC) and evaluate their performance at elevated temperatures. Design/methodology/approach Two control factors with three levels each i.e. FA (0, 25 and 50 per cent by weight) and FCS (0, 50 and 100 per cent by volume) as a GGBS and NCA replacement, respectively, were adopted in AASFC mixtures. Further, AASFC mixture specimens were subjected to different levels of elevated temperature, i.e. 200°C, 400°C, 600°C and 800°C. Compressive strength and residual compressive strength were considered as responses. Three different optimization techniques i.e. gray relational analysis, technique for order preference by similarity to ideal solution and Desirability function approach were used to optimize AASFC mixtures subjected to elevated temperatures. Findings As FA replacement increases in FCS based AASFC mixtures, workability increases and compressive strength decreases. The introduction of FCS as replacement to NCA in AASFC mixture did not show any significant change in compressive strength under ambient condition. AASFC produced with 75 per cent GGBS, 25 per cent FA and 100 per cent FCS was found to have excellent elevated temperature enduring properties among all other AASFC mixtures studied. Originality/value Although several studies are available on using GGBS, FA and FCS in production of OPC-based concretes, present study reports the performance of novel FCS based AASFC mixtures subjected to elevated temperatures. Further, GGBS, FA and FCS used in the present investigation significantly reduces CO2 emission and environmental degradation associated with OPC production and NCA extraction, respectively.


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