2.1. Preparation Process of the CRFA
Due to the size limitation of the pilot plant, the steps to remove the impurities of concrete waste and crush them into concrete blocks smaller than 200 mm are not included in the preparation process. The pilot plant preparation process of the CRFA can be divided into two main stages.
In the first stage, the concrete waste is crushed by PE250 × 400 jaw crusher (Guangdong Leimeng Heavy Machinery Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Guangzhou, China). The size of the obtained aggregate can be controlled by adjusting the outlet size of the jaw crusher. All the concrete waste blocks smaller than 200 mm are crushed into blocks smaller than 50 mm.
The second stage is the cyclic sand making. The blocks smaller than 50 mm are crushed repeatedly until all the aggregate has an average particle size of less than 4.75 mm. The obtained aggregate with an average particle size of smaller than 4.75 mm is called the CRFA. The equipment used in this cyclic process is composed of a feeder machine, a conveyor belt, a vibrating screen, and the PCX8040 sand making machine (hammer crusher, Guangdong Leimeng Heavy Machinery Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Guangzhou, China). During the procedure, the whole powder produced is retained in the CRFA. The equipment is displayed in
Figure 1.
2.2. Modified Packing Density Method for the CRFA Concrete Mix Design
When the conventional packing density method is applied to the concrete mix design, it designs the aggregate mixture with the highest density, i.e., maximum packing [
24]. Although this kind of approach can reduce the amount of binder and lower the shrinkage and creep of the concrete, the mass fraction of the fine aggregate (MFF) in the optimal aggregate mixture is high [
22]. As there is much powder in the CRFA, a high MFF may lead to the large specific surface area of the aggregate and worsen the concrete workability. Thus, to suit the packing density method to the CRFA, the modified packing density method is proposed in this section. Instead of choosing an MFF, which leads to the largest packing density like the conventional approach, the modified packing density method uses the MFF above which the increment in the packing density is not considerable. At the MFF given by the modified approach, both the void content and the specific surface area of the aggregate mixture can be maintained on a low level. Since there is not much powder in the coarse aggregate, the proportion of the coarse aggregate can still be determined by the conventional packing density method. As the packing density correlates positively with the bulk density [
25], the bulk density is measured for the proportion selection in place of the packing density from now on.
After the proportion of the aggregate mixture is obtained, the water-to-cement (W/C) ratio can be determined based on the strength requirement. The volume of the cement paste is equal to the void content of the combined aggregate. In order to coat the aggregate particles and obtain a workable concrete mixture, the paste content should be higher than the void content [
22]. The ratio of the paste content to the void content is called the excess factor (EF), and the recommended range of EF is 1.05–1.15 [
22]. The amount of water and cement can be calculated based on the volume of the cement paste and the W/C ratio.
As the water absorption of the CRFA is higher than that of natural aggregate, additional water is required to improve the workability of the CRFA concrete. However, adding too much water will reduce the concrete strength since the CRFA cannot retain the additional water strongly, and part of the absorbed water may flow into the concrete mixture and influence the W/C ratio. In order to take account of this effect, the saturation factor (SF) is introduced herein to evaluate the degree of the saturation of the CRFA; the recommended range of SF is 0–60% [
19]. The CRFA concrete can achieve the same mechanical performance as the natural aggregate concrete by adjusting the SF. Moreover, water reducer can be added to improve the behavior of CRFA concrete.
For further reducing the cement content and the MFF of the CRFA concrete, a three-stage optimization is conducted. In the first stage, the EF is optimized, and the minimum value satisfying the workability requirement is regarded as the optimal EF. In the second stage, the cement paste is replaced with the CRFA of the same volume to further lower the paste content. The ratio between the paste content after and before the replacement is called the cement paste index (CPI). The slump test is conducted to determine the minimum CPI for workable concrete mixtures. In the third stage, the CRFA is replaced by a natural coarse aggregate of the same volume for decreasing the specific surface area of the aggregate mixture. The minimum MFF satisfying the concrete workability requirement is regarded as the optimal MFF. After the three-stage optimization, the obtained concrete mixture proportion has a low cement paste content, and the obtained aggregate mixture has both a low void content and a low specific surface area.
The procedure for the proposed CRFA concrete mixture design is outlined in
Figure 2, and the step-by-step procedure is summarized below:
- Step 1.
Preparing the materials
The CRFA and coarse aggregate are dried, and their properties (density, water absorption, etc.) are measured.
- Step 2.
Determining the proportion of coarse aggregate of different sizes
The proportion that maximizes the compacted bulk density of the coarse aggregate mixture is selected as the proportion of the coarse aggregate.
The CRFA is added into the coarse aggregate mixture obtained in the previous step. Then, the MFF above which the increment in the bulk density is not remarkable is selected as the initial MFF.
- Step 4.
Calculating the aggregate content
The aggregate content for 1 m
3 of concrete can be calculated by Equations (1) and (2):
: the mass of the CRFA in 1 m3 of concrete (kg);
: the mass of coarse aggregate i in 1 m3 of concrete (kg);
: the bulk density corresponding to the MFF obtained in step 3 (kg/m3);
: the mass fraction of the fine aggregate;
: the mass fraction of coarse aggregate i.
- Step 5.
Selecting the W/C ratio for the target strength grade
The W/C ratio of the CRFA concrete is the same as that of the natural aggregate concrete. The content of the water and the cement can be calculated by Equations (3) and (4), respectively:
: the mass of cement in 1 m3 of concrete (kg);
: the mass of the water included in W/C ratio in 1 m3 of concrete (kg);
: the density of the cement (kg/m3);
: the density of the water (kg/m3);
: the apparent density of the CRFA (kg/m3);
: the apparent density of coarse aggregate i (kg/m3);
: the void volume (m3);
: the excess factor; the initial value is 1.05.
- Step 6.
Selecting SF and calculating the additional water content
An SF is selected based on the W/C ratio. The large SF values are used for the concrete with a low W/C ratio, and the small values are used for the concrete with a high W/C ratio. For example, an SF of 10% is used for the W/C ratio of 0.50, and an SF of 60% is used for the W/C ratio of 0.33. The content of the additional water can be calculated by Equation (6):
- Step 7.
Determining the water reducer content
The water reducer content (
) that offers the best workability of the concrete is selected. The initial mixture proportion can also be obtained in this step, and the total water content of the initial mixture proportion can be defined as:
: the mass of the water in 1 m3 of concrete (kg);
: the mass of the water in the water reducer (kg). For the liquid water reducer, it is approximately equal to the mass of the water reducer, i.e., .
In the optimization stage (steps 8–10), the content of the water reducer can be adjusted to achieve the best fresh performance of the concrete.
The workability test is conducted on the concrete with different excess factors, and the minimum value satisfying the workability requirement is regarded as the optimal EF. For different excess factors, the amount of water and cement needs to be recalculated by Equations (3), (4), and (7).
The workability test is conducted on the concrete with different cement paste indices, and the minimum value satisfying the workability requirement is regarded as the optimal CPI. For different cement paste indices, the content of the water, the CRFA, and the cement need to be recalculated by Equation (4) and Equations (6)–(9).
and
in Equation (4) and Equation (6) are replaced by
and
, respectively.
The workability test is conducted on the concrete with different mass fractions of the fine aggregate, and the minimum value satisfying the concrete workability requirement is regarded as the optimal MFF. For different MFFs, the content of the water, the CRFA, and the coarse aggregate need to be recalculated by Equations (6), (7), (10), and (11).
in Equation (6) is replaced by
.
: the recalculated mass of the CRFA in 1 m3 of concrete in step 10 (kg);
: the recalculated mass of coarse aggregate i in 1 m3 of concrete in step 10 (kg);
”: the change in the mass of the CRFA for different MFFs (kg).
The obtained optimal proportion is checked for meeting the strength requirement. If the strength requirement is not satisfied, we go back to step 5 and reselect the W/C ratio and SF.
- Step 11.
Mixture proportion adjustment
The concrete mixture proportion is adjusted by the concrete apparent density. The adjusted material content of 1 m
3 of concrete is calculated by:
: the mass of the CRFA in 1 m3 of concrete at the optimal proportion (kg);
: the mass of coarse aggregate i in 1 m3 of concrete at the optimal proportion (kg);
: the mass of water in 1 m3 of concrete at the optimal proportion (kg);
: the mass of cement in 1 m3 of concrete at the optimal proportion (kg);
: the mass of water reducer in 1 m3 of concrete at the optimal proportion (kg);
: the concrete apparent density (kg/m3).
2.4. CRFA Testing Method
Eight physical properties of the CRFA, namely, particle gradation, fineness module, the content of fine powder, crush index, apparent density, saturated-surface-dry water absorption, loose bulk density, and loose void volume, were tested by the methods suggested in standard GB/T 25176-2010 “Recycled Fine Aggregate for Concrete and Mortar” [
26] and standard GB14684-2011 “Sand for Construction” [
27].
The particle appearance of the CRFA of five different particle sizes of 1.18–2.36 mm, 0.60–1.18 mm, 0.30–0.60 mm, 0.15–0.30 mm, and 0–0.15 mm was also analyzed using Olympus, SZX10 stereomicroscope (Olympus Corporation, Tokyo, Japan). The powder particles smaller than 0.15 mm were sieved by a 0.080 mm standard cement negative pressure screen. After that, the dried powder particles smaller than 0.080 mm were divided into two samples. One sample was gilded by Cressington 108 Sputter Coater (Cressington Scientific Instruments Ltd., Watford, England (UK)), and microcosmic analysis was conducted on it by ZEISS EVO-18 Premium scanning electron microscope (Carl Zeiss AG, Oberkochen, Germany). The particle distribution of the other sample was measured by using the Horiba LA-950 laser particle size analyzer (Horiba Ltd., Kyoto, Japan).