2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2016.02.013
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A review of waste products utilized as supplements to Portland cement in concrete

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Cited by 391 publications
(201 citation statements)
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“…Probably, the most important argument is that any substitution of a part of Portland cement in a concrete mix always leads to some environmental benefits, at least from the point of view of decreasing carbon dioxide emissions. [1][2][3][4] In addition, many pozzolans belong to waste materials [5][6][7][8] which not only makes them environment friendly but also forces down their price on the market below Portland cement.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Probably, the most important argument is that any substitution of a part of Portland cement in a concrete mix always leads to some environmental benefits, at least from the point of view of decreasing carbon dioxide emissions. [1][2][3][4] In addition, many pozzolans belong to waste materials [5][6][7][8] which not only makes them environment friendly but also forces down their price on the market below Portland cement.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A lot of scientists devote their scientific works to this problem. We can see the parts of this theme in the works of F. Bencardino [1]; Green concrete production with ceramic wastes and laterite [2]; Strength and ductility characteristics of reinforcing steel bars milled from scrap metals [3]; Evaluation of the flexural behavior of composite beam with inverted-T steel girder and steel fiber reinforced ultra high performance concrete slab [4]; Predicting the post-cracking behavior of normal-and highstrength steel-fiber-reinforced concrete beams [5]; High-volume natural volcanic pozzolan and limestone powder as partial replacements for portland cement in self-compacting and sustainable concrete [6]; Improving degradation resistance of sisal fiber in concrete through fiber surface treatment [7]; Experimental investigations of size effect in reinforced concrete beams failing by shear [8]; Utilization of coal-and biomass-fired ash in the production of self-consolidating concrete [9]; Theoretical and experimental study on mechanical properties and flexural strength of fly ash-geopolymer concrete [10]; A review of waste products utilized as supplements to Portland cement in concrete [11]; Benefits of using blended waste coarse lightweight aggregates in structural lightweight aggregate concrete [12]; Evaluation of various treatment methods for enhancing the physical and morphological properties of coarse recycled concrete aggregate [13]; Time-dependent behaviour of steel tubular columns filled with recycled coarse aggregate concrete [14]; Investigation of using recycled powder from waste of clay bricks and cement solids in reactive powder concrete [15]; Eco-friendly concretes with reduced water and cement contents -Mix design principles and laboratory tests [16]; Recycling lead-based paint contaminated deconstructed masonry materials as aggregate for Portland cement concrete-…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…z odpadów budowlanych i rozbiórek [3], z rozdrobnionych odpadów betonowych [4], odpadów prefabrykowanych elementów konstrukcyjnych [5]. Kompozyt taki można otrzymywać także dodając popiół osadów ściekowych [6]. Betony i zaprawy odgrywają również istotną rolę w procesie recyklingu odpadów tworzyw sztucznych, m.in.…”
Section: Wprowadzenieunclassified