| Peer-Reviewed

Investigation on the Use of Demolished Concrete and Glass in Concrete

Received: 18 October 2019     Accepted: 17 December 2019     Published: 27 December 2019
Views:       Downloads:
Abstract

The problem of waste generation has rapidly become a serious issue of concern for many scholars. This study takes the problem of waste that is generated from construction fields, such as demolished concrete, glass and aims to reuse the construction and demolition debris for use as aggregates in construction purpose. Study involving reuse of demolition waste like demolished concrete, glass as partial replacement of coarse and fine aggregate up to 20% was performed before. But in those studies, either coarse aggregate is replaced with demolition waste or fine aggregate was replaced with glass. This study attempts to fully replace coarse aggregate with demolished concrete and crushed glass as partial replacement of fine aggregate to a content of 20, 25 and 30%, respectively. The main findings of this investigation revealed that using glass in lieu of sand at 30% replacement as fine aggregate gives maximum compressive strength which is significantly greater than M35 (35 MPa) grade concrete and nearing M40 (40 MPa) to M45 (45MPa) grade concrete, which indicates the suitability of use in various constructions. It also revealed that with increasing quantity of glass the corresponding strength increase doesn’t occur linearly, but the rate of increase gradually slows down with increasing of the amount of glass in the concrete samples.

Published in Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning (Volume 4, Issue 4)
DOI 10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13
Page(s) 81-86
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2019. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Demolished Concrete, Glass, Sand, Concrete, Compressive Strength

References
[1] Omahony, M. M. (1997). An analysis of the shear strength of recycled aggregates. Materials and Structures, 30 (10), 599–606.
[2] Taesoon Park. (2003). Application of Construction and Building Debris as Base and Subbase Materials in Rigid Pavement. Journal of Transportation Engineering. 129. 558-563.
[3] Jha, Kumar & Rao, Akash & Misra, Sudhir. (2007). Use of aggregates from recycled construction and demolition waste in concrete. Resources Conservation and Recycling.
[4] Malek K Batayneh, & Iqbal Marie & Ibrahim Asi. (2007). Use of selected waste materials in concrete mixes. Waste management (New York, N. Y). 27 1872–1876.
[5] Topcu, I. B., Boğa, A. R., & Bilir, T. (2008). Alkali-silica reactions of mortars produced by using waste glass as fine aggregate and admixtures such as fly ash and Li2CO3. Waste management, 28 5, 878-84.
[6] Vancura, Mary & Khazanovich, Lev & Tompkins, Derek. (2009). Reappraisal of Recycled Concrete Aggregate as Coarse Aggregate in Concretes for Rigid Pavements. Transportation Research Record. 2113. 149-155.
[7] Idir, R., Cyr, M. and Tagnit-Hamou, A. (2010) Use of Fine Glass as ASR Inhibitor in Glass Aggregate Mortars. Construction and Building Materials, 24, 1309-1312.
[8] Mageswari, M., &Vidivelli, D. B. (2010). The Use of Sheet Glass Powder as Fine Aggregate Replacement in Concrete. The Open Civil Engineering Journal, 4 (1), 65–71.
[9] Xuan, D. X., Houben, L. J. M., Molenaar, A. A. A., & Shui, Z. H. (2011). Mixture optimization of cement treated demolition waste with recycled masonry and concrete. Materials and Structures, 45 (1-2), 143–151.
[10] Ling, T.-C., & Poon, C.-S. (2012). A comparative study on the feasible use of recycled beverage and CRT funnel glass as fine aggregate in cement mortar. Journal of Cleaner Production, 29-30, 46–52.
[11] Parbat, Dhananjay. (2013). REPLACEMENT OF NATURAL SAND IN CONCRETE BY WASTE PRODUCTS: A STATE OF ART. Journal of Environmental Research and Development. 7. 1651-1656.
[12] Monish, Mohd & Srivastava, Vikas & Agarwal, V & Mehta, P & Kumar, Rakesh. (2013). Demolished waste as coarse aggregate in concrete. Journal of Academia and Industrial Research. 1 9 540-543.
[13] Ulloa, Vivian & Garcia Taengua, Emilio & Pelufo, Maria & Domingo, Alberto & Serna, P. (2013). New Views on Effect of Recycled Aggregates on Concrete. Materials Journal 110 6 687-696.
[14] Harvey, Brad, "Compressive Strength Relative to Sustainable Materials in Concrete" (2017). Honors Research. Projects. 538.
[15] Suganya, Suganya. (2014). Use of Glass Powder as Fine Aggregate in High Strength Concrete. 2.
[16] Halahla, Abdul samee & Akhtar, Mohammad & Almasri, Amin. (2019). Utilization of Demolished Waste as Coarse Aggregate in Concrete. Civil Engineering Journal. 5. 540.
[17] Wilson, Alex, (1993). Cement and concrete environmental considerations. Environ. Build. News 2.
[18] Ablam Zidol, Monique Tognonvi & A. Tagnit-Hamou. (2017). Effect of Glass Powder on Concrete Sustainability. New Journal of Glass and Ceramics. 07. 34-47.
[19] Chanbane, B., Sholar, G. A., Musselman, J. A., Page, G. C., 1999. Ten-year performance evaluation of asphalt–rubber surface mixes. Transportation Research Record No. 1681, Transportation Research, Washington, DC, pp. 10–18.
[20] Shayan, A., Xu, A, 1999. Utilization of glass as a pozzolanic material in concrete ARRB TR Internal Report RC91132.
[21] Shayan, A., 2002. Value-added utilization of waste glass in concrete. In IABSE Symposium, Melbourne.
Cite This Article
  • APA Style

    Hasan Md. Taseen Jubair Bhuiyan, Md. Sany Meraj Jihan, Abdullah Md. Sarwaruddin Chowdhury. (2019). Investigation on the Use of Demolished Concrete and Glass in Concrete. Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning, 4(4), 81-86. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13

    Copy | Download

    ACS Style

    Hasan Md. Taseen Jubair Bhuiyan; Md. Sany Meraj Jihan; Abdullah Md. Sarwaruddin Chowdhury. Investigation on the Use of Demolished Concrete and Glass in Concrete. Landsc. Archit. Reg. Plan. 2019, 4(4), 81-86. doi: 10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13

    Copy | Download

    AMA Style

    Hasan Md. Taseen Jubair Bhuiyan, Md. Sany Meraj Jihan, Abdullah Md. Sarwaruddin Chowdhury. Investigation on the Use of Demolished Concrete and Glass in Concrete. Landsc Archit Reg Plan. 2019;4(4):81-86. doi: 10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13

    Copy | Download

  • @article{10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13,
      author = {Hasan Md. Taseen Jubair Bhuiyan and Md. Sany Meraj Jihan and Abdullah Md. Sarwaruddin Chowdhury},
      title = {Investigation on the Use of Demolished Concrete and Glass in Concrete},
      journal = {Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning},
      volume = {4},
      number = {4},
      pages = {81-86},
      doi = {10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13},
      eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.larp.20190404.13},
      abstract = {The problem of waste generation has rapidly become a serious issue of concern for many scholars. This study takes the problem of waste that is generated from construction fields, such as demolished concrete, glass and aims to reuse the construction and demolition debris for use as aggregates in construction purpose. Study involving reuse of demolition waste like demolished concrete, glass as partial replacement of coarse and fine aggregate up to 20% was performed before. But in those studies, either coarse aggregate is replaced with demolition waste or fine aggregate was replaced with glass. This study attempts to fully replace coarse aggregate with demolished concrete and crushed glass as partial replacement of fine aggregate to a content of 20, 25 and 30%, respectively. The main findings of this investigation revealed that using glass in lieu of sand at 30% replacement as fine aggregate gives maximum compressive strength which is significantly greater than M35 (35 MPa) grade concrete and nearing M40 (40 MPa) to M45 (45MPa) grade concrete, which indicates the suitability of use in various constructions. It also revealed that with increasing quantity of glass the corresponding strength increase doesn’t occur linearly, but the rate of increase gradually slows down with increasing of the amount of glass in the concrete samples.},
     year = {2019}
    }
    

    Copy | Download

  • TY  - JOUR
    T1  - Investigation on the Use of Demolished Concrete and Glass in Concrete
    AU  - Hasan Md. Taseen Jubair Bhuiyan
    AU  - Md. Sany Meraj Jihan
    AU  - Abdullah Md. Sarwaruddin Chowdhury
    Y1  - 2019/12/27
    PY  - 2019
    N1  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13
    DO  - 10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13
    T2  - Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning
    JF  - Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning
    JO  - Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning
    SP  - 81
    EP  - 86
    PB  - Science Publishing Group
    SN  - 2637-4374
    UR  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.larp.20190404.13
    AB  - The problem of waste generation has rapidly become a serious issue of concern for many scholars. This study takes the problem of waste that is generated from construction fields, such as demolished concrete, glass and aims to reuse the construction and demolition debris for use as aggregates in construction purpose. Study involving reuse of demolition waste like demolished concrete, glass as partial replacement of coarse and fine aggregate up to 20% was performed before. But in those studies, either coarse aggregate is replaced with demolition waste or fine aggregate was replaced with glass. This study attempts to fully replace coarse aggregate with demolished concrete and crushed glass as partial replacement of fine aggregate to a content of 20, 25 and 30%, respectively. The main findings of this investigation revealed that using glass in lieu of sand at 30% replacement as fine aggregate gives maximum compressive strength which is significantly greater than M35 (35 MPa) grade concrete and nearing M40 (40 MPa) to M45 (45MPa) grade concrete, which indicates the suitability of use in various constructions. It also revealed that with increasing quantity of glass the corresponding strength increase doesn’t occur linearly, but the rate of increase gradually slows down with increasing of the amount of glass in the concrete samples.
    VL  - 4
    IS  - 4
    ER  - 

    Copy | Download

Author Information
  • Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Rajshahi University of Engineering & Technology (RUET), Rajshahi, Bangladesh

  • Department of Civil Engineering, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Rajshahi University of Engineering & Technology (RUET), Rajshahi, Bangladesh

  • Department of Applied Chemistry & Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Technology, University of Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh

  • Sections