We proposed to tackle the problem of fly-ash pollution from municipal solid waste incineration as well as sludge from chemical-mechanical polishing, by partial substitution of cement in mortar. The optimal modified cement mortar determined by the Taguchi method showed unexpected strengthening effect
Conditioned MSWI ash-slag-mix as a replacement for cement in cement mortar
โ Scribed by Tzen-Chin Lee; Zong-Syun Li
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 794 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0950-0618
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โฆ Synopsis
Fly-ash and scrubber-ash are byproducts of municipal solid waste incinerators (MSWIs) that require further treatment before disposal to avoid polluting soil and groundwater with heavy metals. Recycling scrubber-ash is not feasible because it is extremely difficult to melt this material. In this study, fly-ash and scrubber-ash from MSWI were pre-mixed, then added to fly-ash from foundry sand and vitrified into slag by melting. The amount of that the latter was adjusted to maintain a basicity (CaO/SiO 2 ) of 1.1. Slagblended cement mortar (SCM) specimens were molded with 0-40 wt.% cement replaced by slag powder. Toxicity characteristic leaching procedure (TCLP) tests and compressive strength tests were performed. TCLP test results revealed that the concentrations of leached heavy metals were substantially below the regulatory thresholds. Compressive strengths of the SCM specimens were higher than those of the control group after curing for 7 days or longer. Those that had been cured for 28-90 days were about 124-148% stronger in compression than those in the control group. The Pozzolanic reaction accounts for the strengthening effect in the context of the added slag. It is thus feasible to simultaneously recycle MSWI fly-ash, scrubber-ash and fly-ash from foundry sand into useful resources.
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