Use of Biomass Ash in Reinforced Clayey Soil: A Multiscale Analysis of Solid-State Reactions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Geotechnical Analyses
- PR/PeA (PR soil with added wood pellet ash);
- PR/PeA/GEOS (PR soil with added wood pellet ash and activator);
- PR/OlA/GEOS (PR soil with added olive pruning ash and activator);
- PR/GrA/GEOS (PR soil with added grapevine pruning ash and activator).
2.2. XRPD and Electron Microscopy Analyses on PR/ash Mixtures
2.3. FT-IR
3. Discussion
- The initial reduction in compressibility observed in all samples after 1 day of curing was likely due to a mere mechanical effect. In fact, it is known that pozzolanic reactions involving biomass ashes in the systems do not develop products in the early stage of curing [32]. In PR/PeA/GEOS, worse compressibility characteristics were observed at intermediate curing times (7 and 14 days). This could be because at this stage of the system evolution, pozzolanic reactions have already determined a consumption of the added ash but the newly formed compounds are still not able to give beneficial effects compensating for the gradual loss of mere mechanical benefits due to the addition of unreacted PeA. After 28 days of curing, the binding effects are stronger and they compensate for the loss of initial mechanical benefits. The compression curves after 1 and 28 days of curing were in fact superimposed on each other. On the contrary, the results obtained for PR/OlA/GEOS seem to indicate that pozzolanic reactions induce the formation of new compounds, the presence of which determines, at any time up to 28 days, beneficial effects compensating for the gradual loss of mechanical benefits observed in the short term (1 day) and due to the addition of unreacted OlA. Finally, the behavior of PR/GrA/GEOS suggested that after 7 days of curing, new compounds had developed with improved mechanical effects (compressibility reduction) compared to those seen after 1 day with the addition of the unreacted GrA. Nonetheless, these effects were transient, and compressibility increased again after longer curing times (14 and 28 days), although it remained inferior after 1 day of curing. This behavior suggests that after 7 days, new transitional compounds had formed, conferring transient mechanical benefits. Later, such compounds could have been substituted by others, leading to less benefits, at least until 28 days of curing. In such complex systems, pozzolanic reactions are influenced by several variables, such as the chemo-mineralogical characteristics of the ashes [24], the Si/Ca ratio of the mixture, pH, and water content. For these reasons, the rate of pozzolanic reactions is nonlinear and varies in terms of the compressibility characteristics of different mixtures. Nonetheless, it was observed that after 28 days of curing, all mixtures had a compressibility, at different degrees, lower than that observed after 1 day of curing. The effects induced by pozzolanic reactions are expected to be permanent or even to improve over longer curing times, which could allow the formation of better-developed cementitious compounds, as evidenced by the Fe-SEM images taken after 60 days of curing (see point 3).
- None of the XRPD spectra of the three mixtures, at any curing time, showed C-S-H or/and C-A-S-H peaks (Figure 3, Figure 4, and Figure 5), which are the main phases that improve the strength of the samples. At room temperature, only poorly crystalline C-S-H may be formed, which is difficult to detect using XRPD [9,33]. In addition, the illite content decreased in PR/OlA/GEOS and PR/PeA/GEOS (Figure 6 b,c) as the amorphous content increased, as also reported by Chrysochoou [34], while for the PR/GrA/GEOS mixture, the content remained largely stable. Clay granules are attacked in these alkaline environments and form available silica and alumina groups that combine with fly-ash-derived calcium to form amorphous C-S-H phases [33]. This behavior confirms that secondary products, such as C-S-H and C-A-S-H, form principally in amorphous phases, as evidenced by the increase in the amorphous content corresponding to the improvement in the geotechnical properties of the samples.
- Further evidence of the growth of an amorphous product of pozzolanic reactions in gel form is provided by the Fe-SEM images, where the serrated edges of clay lamellae appear rounded, and EDS semi-quantitative analyses showed a drastic increase in the Ca content, from approximately 8% in raw PR soil to approximately 15% on the surface of clay grains after 28 days of curing for the PR/PeA/GEOS, PR/OlA/GEOS, and PR/GrA/GEOS mixtures (Figure 8). After 60 days of curing, two different C-S-H/C-A-S-H reaction products were detected from electron images: intertwined acicular crystals in the PR/PeA/GEOS and PR/GrA/GEOS mixtures (Figure 9a–c) and honeycomb textures characteristic of C-S-H/C-A-S-H tobermorite-like phases in the PR/OlA/GEOS sample (Figure 9b). These structures were found in all mixtures and are comparable to those found in clayey soils traditionally treated with lime [35,36] and recently synthesized for novel functional carrier materials applied in photocatalysis [37]. Figure 6c in Solanki et al. [35] and Figure 6 in Di Sante et al. [36] confirm the similarities of the structure.
- The extent of the pozzolanic reaction can be delineated and studied by determining the change in the position and intensity of diagnostic FT-IR peaks [17,31]. The bands located at 900–1100 cm−1 (Si-O-T stretching modes) and 420–620 cm−1 (Si-O-T bending modes) are sensitive to the chemical reaction, resulting in a shift in the positions indicative of the formation of C-S-H and/or C-A-S-H gels [30]. The shift in the position of the Si-O-T bands is due to an increase in the degree of polymerization of the silicon tetrahedra (SiO4). It can be clearly seen that a shift in the peak position in the functional groups took place for all four samples at different curing times (Figure 11). In detail, for the PR/OlA/GEOS and PR/GrA/GEOS samples (Figure 11b,c), the shift in the position of the Si-O-T bands was already visible at 28 days of treatment, while for the PR/PeA/GEOS sample, a longer curing time (60 days) was required before a shift in the Si-O-T bands (Figure 11a) could be seen. Another effect of the formation of cementitious phases was the progressive decrease in the intensity of the bands at ~3375 cm−1 (O–H stretching) and their widening, a behavior described by Murmu et al. [38] to be due to the involvement of water in the pozzolanic reaction. The reduction in the O–H band intensity at ~3375 was clearly visible for the PR/OlA/GEOS and PR/GrA/GEOS samples (Figure 10c,d).
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Clayey Soil
4.2. Biomass Ashes
4.3. Geotechnical Analyses
4.4. Chemo-Mineralogical Analyses
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lime Amount (wt%) | pH | GrA Amount (wt%) | pH | PeA Amount (wt%) | pH | OlA Amount (wt%) | pH |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 12.10 | 2 | 8.97 | 2 | 9.96 | 2 | 8.98 |
3 | 12.26 | 3 | 9.25 | 3 | 10.59 | 3 | 8.97 |
4 | 12.36 | 4 | 9.39 | 4 | 11.04 | 4 | 9.19 |
5 | 12.39 | 5 | 9.57 | 5 | 11.31 | 5 | 9.34 |
6 | 12.40 | 6 | 9.44 | 6 | 11.59 | 6 | 9.57 |
-- | -- | 10 | 9.70 | 10 | 12.05 | 10 | 9.7 |
-- | -- | 20 | 9.93 | 20 | 12.5 | 20 | 9.72 |
Sample Code | Water Content (wt%) | Void Ratio (e) |
---|---|---|
wt%PR-0.92 | 28 | 0.92 |
PR/PeA | 28 | 0.92 |
PR-1.1 | 28 | 1.1 |
PR/PeA/GEOS | 28 | 1.1 |
PR/OlA/GEOS | 28 | 1.1 |
PR/GrA/GEOS | 28 | 1.1 |
Vibrational Modes | Wavenumber Position (cm−1) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GEOS | PR | OlA | GrA | PeA | |
O-H stretching | 2978 3277 | 3402 3620 | / | 2961 2922 2852 | 2901 2980 |
H-O-H bending | 1646 | 1635 | / | 1696 | / |
CO3−2 stretching | / | 1433 | 1401 | 1393 1453 | 1402 1452 |
Si-O-T (T: tetrahedral Si or Al) stretching | 978 (Si-O) | 912 1001 1015 1167 | 962 1032 1087 | 1006 1027 1035 | 1048 1111 |
CO3−2 bending | / | 715 778 874 | 710 872 | 710 871 | 713 873 |
Si-O-T (T: tetrahedral Si or Al) bending | 437 607 (Si-O) | 422 464 523 | 567 604 | 567 600 | 516 613 |
Mineral Phase | wt% | Err. |
---|---|---|
Quartz | 14.51 | 0.1 |
Calcite | 16.6 | 0.2 |
Dolomite | 1.14 | 0.1 |
Muscovite | 0.88 | 0.1 |
Chamosite | 2.0 | 0.1 |
Oligoclase | 1.25 | 0.1 |
Illite | 25.85 | 0.6 |
Amorphous | 37.8 | 0.1 |
Oxides | wt% |
---|---|
Na2O | 1.49 |
MgO | 3.53 |
Al2O3 | 16.04 |
SiO2 | 65.7 |
K2O | 3.15 |
CaO | 8.0 |
FeO | 2.09 |
Code | Type | Origin | Major Elements (in Oxide wt%) | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GrA | Biomass ashes | Grapevine pruning | NaO | Cl | Mn | K2O | MgO | SiO2 | Cr2O3 | FeO | CaO | Al2O3 | P2O5 | TiO2 | Total |
0.94 | 0.0 | 0.13 | 1.78 | 9.14 | 26.19 | 0.0 | 2.34 | 44.26 | 5.52 | 8.86 | 0.32 | 99.5 | |||
PeA | Biomass ashes | Wood pellets | 0.11 | 0.0 | 1.11 | 0.0 | 32.4 | 16.51 | 0.0 | 2.76 | 37.21 | 5.54 | 3.50 | 0.2 | 99.4 |
OlA | Biomass ashes | Olive tree pruning | 0.58 | 0.0 | 0.12 | 4.94 | 3.85 | 27.95 | 0.0 | 2.89 | 43.31 | 7.90 | 7.83 | 0.35 | 99.8 |
Sample | Mineral Phase | wt% | Err. |
---|---|---|---|
GrA | Periclase Calcite Heulandite Calcioferrite Fairchildite Quartz Hydroxylapatite Amorphous | 1.81 8.34 1.15 1.60 2.23 0.33 5.08 79.5 | 0.01 0.04 0.03 0.02 0.01 0.11 0.21 0.2 |
PeA | Periclase Calcite Portlandite Lime Fairchildite Quartz Apatite Amorphous | 5.77 6.36 0.63 2.06 11.20 0.52 1.39 72.1 | 0.02 0.05 0.04 0.02 0.03 0.14 0.26 0.3 |
OlA | Reichenbachite Calcite Quartz Phosphoferrite Hydrossilapatite Amorphous | 0.95 42.24 4.18 0.42 4.57 47.6 | 0.02 0.15 0.07 0.03 0.03 0.5 |
Sample ID | Test | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ILC | Att. Lim. | Granul. | Proctor | Oedometric | XRPD | QPA | SEM | FT-IR | |
PR | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | |
OlA | x | x | x | x | |||||
PeA | x | x | x | x | |||||
GrA | x | x | x | x | |||||
GEOS | x |
Mixture ID | Curing Time (days) | Test | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oedometric | XRPD | QPA | SEM | FT-IR | ||
PR/Pea | 1 | x | ||||
7 | x | |||||
14 | x | |||||
28 | x | |||||
60 | ||||||
PR/PeA/GEOS | 1 | x | x | x | x | x |
7 | x | x | x | x | x | |
14 | x | x | x | x | x | |
28 | x | x | x | x | x | |
60 | x | x | ||||
PR/OlA/GEOS | 1 | x | x | x | x | x |
7 | x | x | x | x | x | |
14 | x | x | x | x | x | |
28 | x | x | x | x | x | |
60 | x | x | ||||
PR/GrA/GEOS | 1 | x | x | x | x | x |
7 | x | x | x | x | x | |
14 | x | x | x | x | x | |
28 | x | x | x | x | x | |
60 | x | x |
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Fastelli, M.; Cambi, C.; Zucchini, A.; Sassi, P.; Pandolfi Balbi, E.; Pioppi, L.; Cotana, F.; Cavalaglio, G.; Comodi, P. Use of Biomass Ash in Reinforced Clayey Soil: A Multiscale Analysis of Solid-State Reactions. Recycling 2023, 8, 5. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling8010005
Fastelli M, Cambi C, Zucchini A, Sassi P, Pandolfi Balbi E, Pioppi L, Cotana F, Cavalaglio G, Comodi P. Use of Biomass Ash in Reinforced Clayey Soil: A Multiscale Analysis of Solid-State Reactions. Recycling. 2023; 8(1):5. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling8010005
Chicago/Turabian StyleFastelli, Maximiliano, Costanza Cambi, Azzurra Zucchini, Paola Sassi, Elia Pandolfi Balbi, Leonardo Pioppi, Franco Cotana, Gianluca Cavalaglio, and Paola Comodi. 2023. "Use of Biomass Ash in Reinforced Clayey Soil: A Multiscale Analysis of Solid-State Reactions" Recycling 8, no. 1: 5. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling8010005
APA StyleFastelli, M., Cambi, C., Zucchini, A., Sassi, P., Pandolfi Balbi, E., Pioppi, L., Cotana, F., Cavalaglio, G., & Comodi, P. (2023). Use of Biomass Ash in Reinforced Clayey Soil: A Multiscale Analysis of Solid-State Reactions. Recycling, 8(1), 5. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling8010005