A Mini Review on Properties of Portland Cement Concrete with Geopolymer Materials as Partial or Entire Replacement
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The effects of chemical admixtures such as silicon dioxide (SiO2) powder on the improvement of physical and mechanical properties of this concrete type.
- The efficiency of chemical activators at different molar concentrations for the performance of GPC concrete using various ratios of these solutions in the mix design.
- The effect of FA and other pozzolanic admixtures such as GPC content in concrete mix design in order to achieve optimal combination and the optimum ratio of alkaline activator.
2. Concrete Additives
- Optimal economic use of this type of concrete in the construction industry
- Preserving the environment
- Workability improvement in fresh concrete
- Increasing compressive strength and durability of hardened concrete
- Reducing hydration temperature in concrete
3. Specimen Preparation and Concrete Manufacturing Process
- (A)
- coarse and fine aggregates along with PCC and pozzolanic admixtures such as FA were quantified before mixing. Fine aggregates (Figure 1a) [16] commonly consist of sand or crushed stone, including most particles with a size smaller than 5 mm (0.2 in). Coarse aggregates (Figure 1b) [16] consist of a combination of gravels or crushed stone with a size larger than 5 mm, which is between 9.5 mm and 37.5 mm based on ASTM standard [17].
- (B)
- To make chemical solutions, sodium hydroxide (SH) pellets and sodium silicate (SS) powders were separately blended with water in the Na2SiO3/NaOH ratio of 2.5 to produce alkaline liquid with different molarities. This liquid was provided 24 h before mixing day. The alkaline solutions should be mixed as it causes the polymerization to be more easily formed based on Davidovits [18]. Generally, the manufacturing process, which is approximately similar in all standards, can be categorized into three steps:
4. Mechanical Properties of Geopolymer Concrete
4.1. Influencing Factors on GPC Compressive Strength
- Ratio of Alkaline activator to fly ash by mass: 0.4
- Ratio of SS to SH: 2.5
- Molarity of SH solution: 14 M
- Additive dosage: 2%
4.2. Factors on Workability of GPC and PCC
4.3. Concurrent Efficiency of Fly Ash and OPC on Mechanical Properties
4.4. Efficiency of Alkaline Solution and Ambient Condition on GPC
5. Discussion
- Binder content (fly ash quantity)
- Sodium silicate-to-sodium hydroxide (SS/SH) ratio
- Alkaline solution-to-binder ratio
6. Conclusions
- Temperature is one of the significant factors inducing the reduction in bond strength, when GPC is exposed to temperatures over 300 C.
- Generally, GPC demonstrates similar or better performance for bond properties in comparison with OPC [27].
- For the percentage of pozzolanic material, the improvement of mechanical properties such as compressive strength and flexural strength in these concrete types can be seen in the range of 30–50% of PC replacement ratio at 28 days [39,45]. On the contrary, the increase of composite reinforced materials such as rubber fiber in concrete content leads to the reduction in flexural strength and elasticity modulus of both GPC and OPC while increasing rubber fiber from 0% to 30% cement by weight, as rubber fiber has this capability to provide a better bridge between propagated cracks [28].
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Author | Aim | Results |
---|---|---|
Neupane et al. [23] | Investigation on compressive strength improvement of ambient cured GPC concrete compared to OPC concrete | GPC and OPC concretes of four different grades and workability levels at standard curing (ambient) conditions (23 ) were experimentally studied. The compressive strength of GPC at early ages (1-3 days) was significantly lower than that of OPC. From 28 to 90 days, the growth of the strength enhancement in GPC was considerably higher than that of OPC. |
Ninyawati et al. [25] | Evaluating the compressive strength for both ordinary and GPC concrete with cylinder specimens | GPC cylinder specimens with the SH concentration of 10 M and the ratio of SS/SH = 2.5 had 26.78% higher compressive strength than ordinary concrete cylinders. |
Farhan et al. [26] | Investigation of engineering properties of fly ash-based GPC with different SH concentrations compared to OPC | The compressive strength of GPC with the SH concentration values of 14M and 12M were higher than those of OPC specimens at 7 and 28 days. The elasticity modules of GPC under uniaxial tension were around 7–8% less than that of OPC. The elasticity modules of GPC under compression were about 12–13% less than that of OPC. |
Zhang et al. [27] | The comparison of temperature effect on compressive strength of GPC and OPC | The degradation in concrete strength was seen for both GPC and OPC beyond 300 °C. The relatively better bond properties were found for GPC specimens with the SiO2/K2O molar ratio of 1 compared to the similar levels of compressive strength for OPC. |
Luhar et al. [28] | Evaluating the strength of RGPC compared to ROPC based on percentage of waste rubber fibers | The compressive strength in both RGPC and ROPC was decreased while increasing the percentage of waste rubber fibers at all ages. The elasticity modules of RGPC and ROPC was sharply decreased by 36.34% and 34.54%, respectively, while increasing fiber content from 0 to 30%. |
Kwasny et al. [29] | The effect of W/S ratio on behavior of GPMs and PCMs | The increment of W/S ratio led to the decrement of compressive strength at each age (1, 7, 28 days). GPMs mixes had very rapid and higher strength, approximately three times that of equivalent PCMs, achieving 55–66% of their strength at 28 days in the first 24 h after mixing. |
Author | Aim | Results |
---|---|---|
Xie and Kayali [30] | Effect of superplasticizer on workability enhancement of Class F and Class C | The used superplasticizer was less effective in comparison with its behavior in OPC mixture. Based on workability results, PC had the effective role for Class C compared to Class F. Naphthalene had a similar effect for both fly ash types. |
Nematollahi and Sanjayan [10] | Effect of different superplasticizers and activator combinations on workability and strength | The mixture containing activated fly ash with multi-compound activator (Na2SiO3/NaOH = 2.5) had higher workability and strength compared to NaOH-activated fly ash. In activated fly ash by NaOH solution (8M), Naphthalene SP led to an increase of 136% in workability with no drawback effect on concrete strength. |
Nath and Sarker [31] | The effect of ambient temperature (20–23°C) on improvement of GPC workability and compressive strength. | Workability was enhanced when alkaline solution was increased along with the reduction in compressive strength. SS/SH ratio of 2.5 indicated less workability comparable to those with 1.5 and 2. |
Almuwbber et al. [32] | The effect of variation in cement characteristics on SCC workability and strength | The slump values of cement were commonly enhanced while adding FA up to certain extent and then remained constant. The decrement in compressive strength was observed while increasing FA concentration regardless of superplasticizer dosage. |
Alrefaei et al. [33] | The effect of different SPs on Alkali Activated Pastes | PC was effective for relatively high W/P ratio (≥0.36). In contrast, N had better performance in the case of low W/P ratio in AAMs containing Na2SiO3. Reducing water content in AAMs with Na2SiO3 had negligible effect on compressive strength. |
Xie et al. [34] | The effect of combinative material (GGBS, FA) on workability and concrete strength | GGBS dosage lower than 25% had a slight effect on the workability and strength of GRAC. The optimal mechanical performance and workability in terms of GRAC was obtained by using 50% FA and 50% GRAC with W/B ratio = 0.5. |
Author | Aim | Results |
---|---|---|
Mehta and Sidique [37] | The effect of low calcium fly ash as partial replacement on compressive strength, water absorption and porosity | An upward trend with the inclusion of fly ash as 20% cement weight was observed at all ages. The increment of fly ash up to 20% resulted in a reduction in permeation properties, such as water absorption. The increase of more than 20% FA marginally reduced the strength and permeation properties. |
Moon et al. [38] | The effect of fly ash on strength of high-volume fly ash mortar | The compressive strength of fly ash mortar (50% FA) was significantly increased, comparable to that of OPC mortar at 7 days. The incremental trend of concrete strength was considerably observed up to 91 days, and after this age the rate of increase was lower compared to 91 days and other early ages. |
Ghafoori et. al. [39] | The effect of class F fly ash on compressive strength and sulfate resistance of type V Portland cement | In spite of the effective role of fly ash partially replaced with type V Portland cement on improvement of sulfate resistance, this result was not as much as expected as it hardly went beyond 15% in the best performance. Overall, 15%, 20% and 25% fly ash had the lowest expansion and highest strength of 333 and 416kg/m3, respectively. |
Wang et al. [40] | Mechanical properties and environmental impacts of pervious concrete containing fly ash based on the C/A ratio | C/A has a significant influence on the properties of pervious concrete. C/A ratio in the range of 0.20–0.24 and 20% fly ash were suggested to produce high-strength pervious concrete and porosity. |
Hadi et al. [41] | The effect of optimum mix design of GPP on GPC properties | The inclusion of 40% GGBFS in GPP content was found as an optimum mix design. GPC properties based on optimum mix design of GPP were also better compared to OPC properties. |
Sathyan et al. [42] | The comparison of SP effect on GPC and OPC | SP has the key role in the reduction of permeability value. Durability improvement was seen for concrete specimens containing SP compared to those without SP. |
Author | Aim | Results |
---|---|---|
Mishra et al. [43] | The efficacy of NaOH on the improvement of GPC compressive strength | At 7 and 28 days, the maximum compressive strength was increased while increasing the NaOH molarity from 8M to 16M, as well as the curing time from 24 to 48 h; however, no significant change was seen from 48 to 72 h curing time. |
Bhikshma et al. [44] | The efficiency of alkaline solution on compressive strength of GPC | GPC concrete with the compressive strength of 30MPa could occur by adopting an alkaline solution to fly ash ratio of 0.50, which was the highest amount achieved. |
Shehab et al. [45] | The effect of alkaline solution on the mechanical properties of GPC and its behavior. | The highest value of mechanical properties such as compressive, tensile, flexural strength at 28 days was at a 50% cement replacement ratio. Compressive strength with material content of 350 kg/m3 and alkaline solution ratio of 0.55 was the highest value. |
Ibrahim et al. [46] | The effect of alkaline solution, binder content and curing time | Workability of fresh concrete was attributed to water/solids ratio in the mixture. The highest value of compressive strength was recorded for the mixture with binder content of 400 kg/m3, SS/SH ratio of 2.5 and 7-day curing. |
Aliabdo et al. [47] | The effect of water addition, plasticizer and alkaline solution constitution | The increment of additional water up to 30 kg/m3 enhanced the workability of fly ash up to 200%. GPC workability was increased up to 115%. A slight increase in water absorption and porosity and decrease in compressive strength and elasticity modulus were observed while increasing alkaline solution content. The properties of GPC were improved by increasing NaOH molarity up to 16 M. The optimum ratio of NaOH /Na2SiO3 was 0.4. |
Ishwarya et al. [48] | The effect of SC/SS dosage on the strength of FA/ slag GPP | The increment of slag content and activator dosage caused the increase of compressive strength. The increase of W/b ratio reduced compressive strength. The developed pastes with 30 wt % activator dosage along with 0.21 w/b ratio and FA/slag ratio of 2:1 produced mortar with 72 MPa compressive strength. |
Koushkbaghi et al. [49] | The effect of SS/SH on mechanical and durability of GPC containing RCA. | The increase of SS/SH can improve GPC strength. The usage of RCA decreased GPC strength by up to 28%. The enhancement of SS/SH ratio can help to reduce the chloride ions permeability leading to the reduction of GPC absorption. SS/SH ratio of three showed higher density and less porosity compared to the lower ratios. |
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Tee, K.F.; Mostofizadeh, S. A Mini Review on Properties of Portland Cement Concrete with Geopolymer Materials as Partial or Entire Replacement. Infrastructures 2021, 6, 26. https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6020026
Tee KF, Mostofizadeh S. A Mini Review on Properties of Portland Cement Concrete with Geopolymer Materials as Partial or Entire Replacement. Infrastructures. 2021; 6(2):26. https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6020026
Chicago/Turabian StyleTee, Kong Fah, and Sayedali Mostofizadeh. 2021. "A Mini Review on Properties of Portland Cement Concrete with Geopolymer Materials as Partial or Entire Replacement" Infrastructures 6, no. 2: 26. https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6020026
APA StyleTee, K. F., & Mostofizadeh, S. (2021). A Mini Review on Properties of Portland Cement Concrete with Geopolymer Materials as Partial or Entire Replacement. Infrastructures, 6(2), 26. https://doi.org/10.3390/infrastructures6020026