Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks

Sludge is an unavoidable by-product of wastewater treatment and creates problem of disposal. Generally, dewatered sludge is disposed of by landfilling. However, this option might not be appropriate due to land limitation and stringent environmental regulations imposed. Therefore, a joint effort s...

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Main Author: Wong, Calvin Hong Kiat
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: 2002
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Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12112/1/FK_2002_75.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12112/
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Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
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spelling my.upm.eprints.121122024-06-28T07:55:30Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12112/ Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks Wong, Calvin Hong Kiat Sludge is an unavoidable by-product of wastewater treatment and creates problem of disposal. Generally, dewatered sludge is disposed of by landfilling. However, this option might not be appropriate due to land limitation and stringent environmental regulations imposed. Therefore, a joint effort study between IWK and UPM was carried out to investigate the possibility of incorporating dried sludge in building bricks at laboratory level as an alternative means of sludge disposal while being an innovative way of making construction materials. Bricks were produced with sludge additions ranging from 10 to 40% by dry weight. The texture and finish on the surface of sludge-amended clay bricks were rather poor. Nonetheless, they were every bit as attractive due to being light red in colour and odourless. As for physical and chemical properties, bricks with up to 40wt% sludge were capable of meeting the appropriate technical standards. However, bricks with more than 30wt% sludge amendment were not recommended for use since they were brittle and easily broken even when handled gently, Heavy metal leaching test carried out on crushed brick samples to simulate extreme environmental conditions resulted in leachate losses way below the USEP A extraction procedure regulatory limits. Therefore, all the bricks with different proportions of sludge were classified as non-hazardous materials and should be safe for use as a building material. In this study, which used the classical handmoulding method to compact the brick specimens in custom-made wooden moulds, the quality of bricks produced were quite varied and the structural properties results obtained were less than satisfactory compared to that of other researchers (using extruders) mainly due to the more uniform and higher moulding pressure applied on their bricks. However, results obtained in this study would serve as a guide to subsequent full-scale studies. On top of that, some anticipated improvements for future full-scale brickrnaking process based on the preliminary results, to produce better quality bricks, was given due attention. Knowing that the technical criteria of the bricks could be optimized, however, this process may require consumer education and regulatory assistance for long term success and acceptance. 2002-08 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12112/1/FK_2002_75.pdf Wong, Calvin Hong Kiat (2002) Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks. Masters thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia. Sewage sludge Sewerage English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
topic Sewage sludge
Sewerage
spellingShingle Sewage sludge
Sewerage
Wong, Calvin Hong Kiat
Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks
description Sludge is an unavoidable by-product of wastewater treatment and creates problem of disposal. Generally, dewatered sludge is disposed of by landfilling. However, this option might not be appropriate due to land limitation and stringent environmental regulations imposed. Therefore, a joint effort study between IWK and UPM was carried out to investigate the possibility of incorporating dried sludge in building bricks at laboratory level as an alternative means of sludge disposal while being an innovative way of making construction materials. Bricks were produced with sludge additions ranging from 10 to 40% by dry weight. The texture and finish on the surface of sludge-amended clay bricks were rather poor. Nonetheless, they were every bit as attractive due to being light red in colour and odourless. As for physical and chemical properties, bricks with up to 40wt% sludge were capable of meeting the appropriate technical standards. However, bricks with more than 30wt% sludge amendment were not recommended for use since they were brittle and easily broken even when handled gently, Heavy metal leaching test carried out on crushed brick samples to simulate extreme environmental conditions resulted in leachate losses way below the USEP A extraction procedure regulatory limits. Therefore, all the bricks with different proportions of sludge were classified as non-hazardous materials and should be safe for use as a building material. In this study, which used the classical handmoulding method to compact the brick specimens in custom-made wooden moulds, the quality of bricks produced were quite varied and the structural properties results obtained were less than satisfactory compared to that of other researchers (using extruders) mainly due to the more uniform and higher moulding pressure applied on their bricks. However, results obtained in this study would serve as a guide to subsequent full-scale studies. On top of that, some anticipated improvements for future full-scale brickrnaking process based on the preliminary results, to produce better quality bricks, was given due attention. Knowing that the technical criteria of the bricks could be optimized, however, this process may require consumer education and regulatory assistance for long term success and acceptance.
format Thesis
author Wong, Calvin Hong Kiat
author_facet Wong, Calvin Hong Kiat
author_sort Wong, Calvin Hong Kiat
title Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks
title_short Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks
title_full Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks
title_fullStr Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks
title_full_unstemmed Determination Of Sewage Sludge Composition As Partial Substitute In Clay Bricks
title_sort determination of sewage sludge composition as partial substitute in clay bricks
publishDate 2002
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12112/1/FK_2002_75.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/12112/
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