Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications

Singapore’s waste disposal trends have been on the rise in the last decade. The current primary solution for waste disposal is through incineration, that can reduce the waste volume by up to 90%. As a by-product of incineration, incineration fly ash has little usage currently, and is often transport...

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Main Author: Chong, Timothy Mun Hou
Other Authors: Wu Wei (CEE)
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/158427
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1584272022-06-04T06:42:14Z Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications Chong, Timothy Mun Hou Wu Wei (CEE) School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Guo Kai wu.wei@ntu.edu.sg Engineering::Civil engineering Singapore’s waste disposal trends have been on the rise in the last decade. The current primary solution for waste disposal is through incineration, that can reduce the waste volume by up to 90%. As a by-product of incineration, incineration fly ash has little usage currently, and is often transported to Singapore’s only landfill to rest. Singapore is abundant in marine clay, with the purpose of reusing incineration fly ash, incineration fly ash is being explored for the feasibility of incorporating it as a partial replacement of cement in the deep mixing process in Singapore. The three main constituents in this study are incineration fly ash, marine clay, and cement. There is little data on marine clay treatment specifically using an incineration fly ash cement admix, thus this study hopes to bridge the gap and extend its usefulness elsewhere. Using unconfined compression test and direct shear test, the study analyses and discusses the unconfined compression strength and shear strength of the incineration fly ash-cement-marine clay sample. From the experimental results, increasing the percentage of incineration fly ash present in the cement mix leads to decreases in both compressive and shear strength. Lastly, incineration fly ash is still suitable for use in specific geotechnic applications when its percentage in the cement mix is kept below 20%, where the unconfined compression and shear strength are within acceptable range, allowing for a way to reuse incineration fly ash. Bachelor of Engineering (Civil) 2022-06-04T06:42:14Z 2022-06-04T06:42:14Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Chong, T. M. H. (2022). Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/158427 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/158427 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Civil engineering
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering
Chong, Timothy Mun Hou
Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications
description Singapore’s waste disposal trends have been on the rise in the last decade. The current primary solution for waste disposal is through incineration, that can reduce the waste volume by up to 90%. As a by-product of incineration, incineration fly ash has little usage currently, and is often transported to Singapore’s only landfill to rest. Singapore is abundant in marine clay, with the purpose of reusing incineration fly ash, incineration fly ash is being explored for the feasibility of incorporating it as a partial replacement of cement in the deep mixing process in Singapore. The three main constituents in this study are incineration fly ash, marine clay, and cement. There is little data on marine clay treatment specifically using an incineration fly ash cement admix, thus this study hopes to bridge the gap and extend its usefulness elsewhere. Using unconfined compression test and direct shear test, the study analyses and discusses the unconfined compression strength and shear strength of the incineration fly ash-cement-marine clay sample. From the experimental results, increasing the percentage of incineration fly ash present in the cement mix leads to decreases in both compressive and shear strength. Lastly, incineration fly ash is still suitable for use in specific geotechnic applications when its percentage in the cement mix is kept below 20%, where the unconfined compression and shear strength are within acceptable range, allowing for a way to reuse incineration fly ash.
author2 Wu Wei (CEE)
author_facet Wu Wei (CEE)
Chong, Timothy Mun Hou
format Final Year Project
author Chong, Timothy Mun Hou
author_sort Chong, Timothy Mun Hou
title Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications
title_short Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications
title_full Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications
title_fullStr Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications
title_full_unstemmed Use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications
title_sort use of incineration fly ash as a substitute for cement in geotechnical applications
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/158427
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