Effect of carbonated recycled coarse aggregates on the mechanical and durability properties of concrete

The carbonation treatment seems to be an efficient process to increase the quality of recycled concrete aggregate (RCA) and to improve the hardened properties of concrete, especially the mechanical ones, as already demonstrated in several studies. However, research on durability properties of concre...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of Building Engineering Vol. 51; p. 104290
Main Authors Russo, Nicoletta, Lollini, Federica
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.07.2022
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Summary:The carbonation treatment seems to be an efficient process to increase the quality of recycled concrete aggregate (RCA) and to improve the hardened properties of concrete, especially the mechanical ones, as already demonstrated in several studies. However, research on durability properties of concrete obtained with carbonated RCA is still limited and do not allow to properly optimize the concrete mix design to effectively gain environmental advantages. In this work, mechanical and durability tests were performed on three different concretes, made with a water/cement ratio equal to 0.5, and either fully natural aggregates, or with a partial replacement with RCA or carbonated RCA (cRCA). RCA and cRCA were obtained by crushing respectively old alkaline and old carbonated concretes, and a further carbonation treatment was also performed on a fraction of cRCA. From results, a limited improvement in compressive strength, electrical resistivity, water absorption and sorptivity was observed in concrete made with cRCA with respect to concrete with RCA, whilst a significant decrease of the chloride diffusion coefficient was obtained. Despite the improvements obtained with respect to concrete with untreated RCA, the mechanical and durability performances of cRCA concrete remained on average lower than concrete made with natural aggregate. [Display omitted] •RCA and cRCA were obtained by crushing old alkaline and carbonated concretes.•About 30% of natural aggregate was replaced with RCA and cRCA to cast new concretes.•Several mechanical and durability tests were performed after different curing times.•The hardened properties of concrete improved when cRCA was used instead of RCA.•The hardened performances of concrete with cRCA remained lower than the Ref concrete.
ISSN:2352-7102
2352-7102
DOI:10.1016/j.jobe.2022.104290