Cementitious composites containing alum sludge ash: An investigation of microstructural features by an advanced nanoindentation technology

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Yue Liu - , University of South Australia (Author)
  • Yan Zhuge - , University of South Australia (Author)
  • Christopher W.K. Chow - , University of South Australia (Author)
  • Alexandra Keegan - , SA Water (Author)
  • Jun Ma - , University of South Australia (Author)
  • Colin Hall - , University of South Australia (Author)
  • Danda Li - , University of South Australia (Author)
  • Phuong Ngoc Pham - , University of Da Nang (Author)
  • Jianyin Huang - , University of South Australia (Author)
  • Weiwei Duan - , University of South Australia (Author)
  • Lei Wang - , Institute of Construction Materials (Author)

Abstract

The use of alum sludge ash (ASA) in cement-based composites was investigated in this study, where the cement was replaced by ASA at weight percentages of 0 %, 10 %, 20 %, and 30 %. The results obtained from an advanced nanoindentation technology (coupling conventional statistic nanoindentation and chemical mapping) exhibited that the indentation modulus and hardness of High-density (HD) C-S-H and Low-density (LD) C-S-H as well as the total volumes of C-S-H gel in ASA-incorporated binder pastes were similar. However, the volume fractions of HD C-S-H in the pastes with 10 % ASA were higher than that in 30 % ASA samples. These results might attribute to the fact that the pastes containing 10% ASA exhibited a higher pozzolanic reaction degree, which was determined using the selective dissolution method. The homogenized indentation properties of paste samples with 10 % ASA were also higher than those incorporating 30 % ASA. In addition to considering HD C-S-H gel volume, the increased amount of unreacted ASA with much lower indentation properties than those of cement clinker might result in a deteriorated mechanical performance of binder pastes. In actual engineering practice, the optimum ratio for cement replaced with ASA in concrete was 10 %, which led to a comparable strength to concrete block samples containing 0 % ASA.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number124286
JournalConstruction and Building Materials
Volume299
Publication statusPublished - 13 Sept 2021
Peer-reviewedYes

Keywords

Keywords

  • Advanced nanoindentation technique, Alum sludge ash, Selective dissolution method, Value-added recycling