Reusing Geopolymer Waste from Matrices Based on Metakaolin or Fly Ash for the Manufacture of New Binder Geopolymeric Matrices
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Program
2.1. Materials, Equipment, and Methods
- Commercial metakaolin (MK) of natural origin, rich in aluminosilicates, purchased from Imerys Argical M1000, France;
- Fly ash (FA) from Jarf Lasfar Thermal Power Plant, considered as industrial waste.
- Standardized sand used as aggregate for the fabrication of the mortars.
- An alkaline activating solution with SiO2/Na2O molar ratio = 1.2 with 63 wt.% of water. It is a mixture of sodium hydroxide (purity 98%), sodium silicate (SiO2/Na2O with molar ratio 2.45% of dry matter), and water.
2.2. Formulation and Manufacturing
2.3. Characterization in the Fresh State
- Calorimetry by using a Netzsch STA 449 F3 Jupiter type calorimeter. After mixing the powder and the activation solution mixture for three minutes, the paste was placed in the crucible and then brought to the desired measurement temperature [7]. The heat exchange at constant temperature was thus recorded.
- Electrochemistry by using a GW INSTEK LCR-6101 type impedance analyzer. The test frequency was set at 1 kHz under 1 V bias voltage. The paste was placed in a cell, in which two copper electrodes were immersed, connected in parallel with the impedance analyzer. The cell was placed in a thermostatically controlled bath set at 60 °C for MK-based pastes and at 80 °C for FA-based pastes. The evolution of the conductivity of the medium as a function of time was thus recorded [29].
2.4. Characterization in the Hardened State
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Workability
3.2. Investigation of the Geopolymerization Process
3.2.1. Calorimetry
- -
- The occurrence of a first exothermic peak from the very first moments (domain I) is attributed to the wetting and dissolution of the reactive aggregates. The alkaline attack destroys the bonds within the amorphous phase and produces monomers, thereby generating heat exchange [7,37,38]. The amplitudes of the peaks of the reference materials MKref and FAref (without additives) are the highest. For each of the three formulations, the amplitude gradually decreases as the content of added recycled geopolymer is increased. This trend can be explained by the increasing substitution of FA and MK, which contain amorphous phases that are very reactive towards the activation solution, taking into account the curing temperature [29,39,40], by recycled geopolymers which are weakly or not at all reactive under these conditions [25].
- -
- A second event (domain II), also exothermic, is attributed to the structuring phenomenon, i.e., the massive precipitation of the products issued from the activation reaction [22,37,38]. On the one hand this phenomenon is delayed when the substitution rate of the reactive materials MK and FA is increased. This means that as the amounts of these materials are reduced, the amounts of the monomeric silicate and aluminate species produced by dissolution decreases, hence the time necessary for oversaturation in aluminosilicate oligomers and to trigger polycondensation is extended. On the other hand, this delay correlates to the heat exchanged, which demonstrates that the polycondensation rate decreases, and as a result, the global heat exchanged is also reduced when the content of recycled geopolymers is increased [22,37,38,41].
- -
- Finally, the reduction in heat generation indicates that the setting process by the formation of a three-dimensional network is attenuated (domain III); its stabilization indicates that the structuring phenomenon is ending.
3.2.2. Electrochemical Measurements
- A first domain identified by the rapid increase in conductivity toward a maximum value is assigned to the combined action of two phenomena: the dissolution of raw materials by the alkaline attack and the action of temperature. In fact, the alkaline attack products are charged monomers whose mobility increases when the temperature of the mixtures is increased from the ambient temperature (during mixing) to the test temperature (60 °C for metakaolin-based suspensions and 80 °C for those that are fly-ash-based)
- The second domain is called the “oversaturation stage” (maximum conductivity values) in which the conductivity is almost constant due to a balance between the dissolution and polycondensation processes.
- In the third domain, the drop in conductivity is explained by the polymerization process (the start of setting by massive precipitation after saturation of the medium in aluminate and silicate species), which takes precedence over dissolution. Indeed, the precursors reorganize by immobilizing the alkaline cations Na+. These cations act as charge compensators in the geopolymer network and are mainly responsible for the conductivity of the medium. Their immobilization is manifested by a continuous decrease in conductivity toward a stable level which indicates the end of the geopolymerization process, i.e., the end of setting.
3.3. Structural and Mechanical Characterization in the Hardened State
3.3.1. Structural and Mechanical Characterization of the Binders
3.3.2. Structural and Mechanical Characterization of Mortars
3.3.3. Newly Formed Geopolymer—Recycled Geopolymers Anchorage by Interfacial Chemical Interaction
4. Conclusions
- The substitution improves the workability of the mixtures. Increasing the substitution rate to the detriment of reactive raw materials reduces the amount of oligomers produced. These species are at the origin of the gelation phenomenon which is responsible for the increase in viscosity of the mixtures at an early age.
- The setting phenomenon was studied by electrochemistry and by calorimetry. Both series of results are in agreement on the delaying effect observed when the substitution rate of recycled geopolymers is increased, as they are more chemically inert under the activation conditions (alkalinity and temperature). Reducing the amount of the most reactive materials lowers the rate of the silicate and aluminate monomer species formed after dissolution in the medium and therefore extended the time necessary for oversaturation of the aluminosilicate oligomers, the initiation of polycondensation, and the end of the geopolymerization process.
- For all the binders investigated, high compressive strengths are generally maintained for substitution rates up to 40 wt.% (about 60 MPa for metakaolin-based binders and 52 MPa for fly-ash-based binders). That suggests a strong cohesion between the newly formed matrix and the recycled geopolymer aggregates.
- The characterization of mortars made of the new matrices and 70 wt.% of standardized sand shows the good bonding capacity of these matrices, with a beneficial effect on the compressive strength. Finally, the association of newly formed geopolymer and recycled aggregates behaves as a binding matrix. Mortars based on matrices incorporating 50 wt.% of recycled geopolymers exhibit strengths of around 50 MPa, a performance which meets the requirements for construction materials.
- An anchoring model by interfacial chemical bonding within the new matrices has been proposed to explain the good adhesion properties between the newly formed geopolymer and the geopolymer waste aggregates.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Oxide (wt.%) | SiO2 | Al2O3 | Fe2O3 | CaO | MgO | SO3 | Na2O | K2O | P2O5 | LOI |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MK | 56.27 | 36.39 | 1.38 | 0.42 | 0.35 | 0.19 | 0.17 | 0.79 | 0.06 | 2.04 |
MKRG | 54.94 | 25.59 | 1.10 | 1.23 | 0.29 | 0.31 | 8.14 | 0.68 | 0.10 | 8.57 |
FA | 50.99 | 22.36 | 5.80 | 4.75 | 2.19 | 0.51 | 0.89 | 1.77 | 0.85 | 9.90 |
FARG | 46.23 | 17.04 | 5.39 | 5.36 | 2.09 | 0.55 | 6.52 | 1.64 | 0.57 | 12.88 |
Sand | 97.81 | 0.45 | 0.06 | 0.39 | 0.08 | 0.22 | 0.10 | 0.24 | 0.02 | 0.63 |
Std. deviation | ±0.03 | ±0.02 | ±0.07 | ±0.02 | ±0.01 | ±0.03 | ±0.01 | ±0.04 | - | ±0.05 |
Formulation | Composition of Alkaline Activation Sol. (SiO2/Na2O) | Liquid/Solid Ratio (L/S) | Curing Temperature (°C) | Curing Duration (h) |
---|---|---|---|---|
FA/FARG | 1.2 | 0.58 | 80 | 20 |
MK/MKRG | 1.2 | 0.83 | 60 | 5 |
MK/FARG | 1.2 | 0.83 | 60 | 5 |
FAref | FA/FARG30 | FA/FARG50 | MKref | MK/MKRG30 | MK/MKRG50 | FA/MKRG30 | MK/FARG50 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ti (min) | 18.04 | 23.64 | 36.41 | 34.92 | 42.20 | 54.31 | 42.97 | 70.17 |
tf (min) | 112.94 | 143.3 | 188.29 | 88.92 | 105.09 | 134.17 | 164.58 | 219.19 |
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Hattaf, R.; Aboulayt, A.; Samdi, A.; Lahlou, N.; Ouazzani Touhami, M.; Gomina, M.; Moussa, R. Reusing Geopolymer Waste from Matrices Based on Metakaolin or Fly Ash for the Manufacture of New Binder Geopolymeric Matrices. Sustainability 2021, 13, 8070. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13148070
Hattaf R, Aboulayt A, Samdi A, Lahlou N, Ouazzani Touhami M, Gomina M, Moussa R. Reusing Geopolymer Waste from Matrices Based on Metakaolin or Fly Ash for the Manufacture of New Binder Geopolymeric Matrices. Sustainability. 2021; 13(14):8070. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13148070
Chicago/Turabian StyleHattaf, Rabii, Abdelilah Aboulayt, Azzedine Samdi, Nouha Lahlou, Mohamed Ouazzani Touhami, Moussa Gomina, and Redouane Moussa. 2021. "Reusing Geopolymer Waste from Matrices Based on Metakaolin or Fly Ash for the Manufacture of New Binder Geopolymeric Matrices" Sustainability 13, no. 14: 8070. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13148070
APA StyleHattaf, R., Aboulayt, A., Samdi, A., Lahlou, N., Ouazzani Touhami, M., Gomina, M., & Moussa, R. (2021). Reusing Geopolymer Waste from Matrices Based on Metakaolin or Fly Ash for the Manufacture of New Binder Geopolymeric Matrices. Sustainability, 13(14), 8070. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13148070