Study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate

Increasing pressures from governments word-wide to reduce carbon dioxide emissions has forced many industries to seek greener, more environmentally-friendly solutions to many of their products. The report that is to follow will report the findings of the strength of geopolymer concrete using r...

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Main Author: Saltmer, James David.
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44536
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-445362023-03-03T17:06:28Z Study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate Saltmer, James David. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Rasiah Sriravindrarajah DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering Increasing pressures from governments word-wide to reduce carbon dioxide emissions has forced many industries to seek greener, more environmentally-friendly solutions to many of their products. The report that is to follow will report the findings of the strength of geopolymer concrete using recycled aggregate. This report is unique in a sense that it will be exclusively intended for Singapore as the experiment will be carried out using locally sourced materials. The mixture used and tested will remain consistent with past reports publish by academics at Curtin University of Technology, namely; D. Hardjito and B. V. Rangan, S. E. Wallah and B. V. Rangan and P. Sarker. The consistency is held in terms of percentage composition of materials, the variation lies within the difference in properties affecting the quality of the locally sourced materials. Attempts to produce an acceptable geopolymer concrete were unsuccessful as such, the scope of the project was revised. The final scope focused on an OPC based concrete with the addition of 25% slag powder. The variation in this mix design lies with the aggregate compositions; whether natural, recycled or a combination. The mix design was based on a recent paper published by P.Dinakar in ACECON2003, Proceedings of the 2rd Asian Conference on Ecstasy in Concrete held December 2010. Bachelor of Engineering (Civil) 2011-06-02T03:47:45Z 2011-06-02T03:47:45Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44536 en Nanyang Technological University 72 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering
Saltmer, James David.
Study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate
description Increasing pressures from governments word-wide to reduce carbon dioxide emissions has forced many industries to seek greener, more environmentally-friendly solutions to many of their products. The report that is to follow will report the findings of the strength of geopolymer concrete using recycled aggregate. This report is unique in a sense that it will be exclusively intended for Singapore as the experiment will be carried out using locally sourced materials. The mixture used and tested will remain consistent with past reports publish by academics at Curtin University of Technology, namely; D. Hardjito and B. V. Rangan, S. E. Wallah and B. V. Rangan and P. Sarker. The consistency is held in terms of percentage composition of materials, the variation lies within the difference in properties affecting the quality of the locally sourced materials. Attempts to produce an acceptable geopolymer concrete were unsuccessful as such, the scope of the project was revised. The final scope focused on an OPC based concrete with the addition of 25% slag powder. The variation in this mix design lies with the aggregate compositions; whether natural, recycled or a combination. The mix design was based on a recent paper published by P.Dinakar in ACECON2003, Proceedings of the 2rd Asian Conference on Ecstasy in Concrete held December 2010.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Saltmer, James David.
format Final Year Project
author Saltmer, James David.
author_sort Saltmer, James David.
title Study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate
title_short Study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate
title_full Study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate
title_fullStr Study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate
title_full_unstemmed Study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate
title_sort study of mortar & concrete with fly ash, slag and recycled aggregate
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/44536
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