Structure, morphology and compressive strength of Alkali-activated mortars containing waste bottle glass nanoparticles

•Waste bottle glass nanoparticles used as precursor to achieve high-strength alkali-activated mortars.•Waste bottle glass nanoparticles increased strength by 16 to 18%•Strength of 68.6 MPa attained using 5% waste bottle glass nanoparticles.•Use of bottle glass offers added value recycling technique....

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Construction & building materials Vol. 342; p. 128005
Main Authors: Fahim Huseien, Ghasan, Faridmehr, Iman, Nehdi, Moncef L., Abadel, Aref A., Aiken, Timothy A., Ghoshal, S.K.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 01-08-2022
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Summary:•Waste bottle glass nanoparticles used as precursor to achieve high-strength alkali-activated mortars.•Waste bottle glass nanoparticles increased strength by 16 to 18%•Strength of 68.6 MPa attained using 5% waste bottle glass nanoparticles.•Use of bottle glass offers added value recycling technique.•Machine learning informational model accurately predicts strength of alkali-activated mortars. Alkali-activated materials (AAMs) have emerged as a sustainable, clinker free binder alternative to portland cement, with reduced consumption of raw materials and very low CO2 emissions. They are produced via the activation of aluminosilicates with alkaline solutions. Millions of tons of bottle glass waste are generated annually worldwide and only a small amount are re-utilized and recycled. Various recycling processes need to be innovated to reduce the volume of waste glasses, which is often landfilled, causing environmental concerns. Waste glass has been utilized as fine aggregate in concrete or as partial replacement for cement. In this study, waste bottle glass nanoparticles (WBGNPs) were incorporated as a precursor combined with ground blast furnace slag (GBFS) and fly ash (FA) to achieve high-strength alkali-activated mortars (AAMs). The effect of WBGNPs, sodium hydroxide molarity, solution modulus (SiO2:Na2O), alkaline solution content, and binder-to-aggregate ratio on the compressive strength development of AAMs were investigated. The strength characteristics of the studied AAMs were assessed by developing an informational model united with a metaheuristic shuffled frog-leaping algorithm (SFLA). The experimental results indicated that after 28 days of curing, AAM prepared with 5% of WBGNPs (precursor) as GBFS/FA replacement attained an improved compressive strength in the range of 16 to 18.4%. Additionally, the optimum mixture containing 5% of WBGNPs as GBFS replacement achieved a strength of 68.6 MPa after 28 days of curing. It was shown that the novel informational SFLA model attained accurate predictions and could appreciably simplify generative design in future computational intelligence of a construction materials platform in civil engineering.
ISSN:0950-0618
DOI:10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2022.128005