2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2012.05.047
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Assessing the potential reuse of recycled glass fibre in problematic soil applications

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Cited by 42 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…At present, Malaysia is the world's third largest exporter of MDF after Germany and France with a total export amounting to RM1.2 billion in 2008. Moreover, numerous studies employing the usage of palm oil EFB have been conducted by researchers (Ahmad et al, 2010(Ahmad et al, , 2012Al-Oqla and Sapuan, 2014;Bateni et al, 2011;Chauhan et al, 2008;Hejazi et al, 2012;Mujah et al, 2013;Park, 2009Park, , 2011 denoting the suitability of such waste to be reused as reinforcing agent towards problematic soils. It can be concluded that EFB is effective in soil reinforcement based on the fact that it increases the soil shear strength parameters around 25%e35% (Ahmad et al, 2010).…”
Section: Potential Uses Of Palm Oil Waste Residuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At present, Malaysia is the world's third largest exporter of MDF after Germany and France with a total export amounting to RM1.2 billion in 2008. Moreover, numerous studies employing the usage of palm oil EFB have been conducted by researchers (Ahmad et al, 2010(Ahmad et al, , 2012Al-Oqla and Sapuan, 2014;Bateni et al, 2011;Chauhan et al, 2008;Hejazi et al, 2012;Mujah et al, 2013;Park, 2009Park, , 2011 denoting the suitability of such waste to be reused as reinforcing agent towards problematic soils. It can be concluded that EFB is effective in soil reinforcement based on the fact that it increases the soil shear strength parameters around 25%e35% (Ahmad et al, 2010).…”
Section: Potential Uses Of Palm Oil Waste Residuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Regarding this subject, over the last 20 years several end-use applications were envisioned and investigated for mechanically recycled thermoset GFRP wastes or recovered glass fibre wastes: i) filler material for artificial wood (Demura et al, 1995), high density polyethylene plastic lumber (George and Dillman, 2000), rubber pavement blocks (Itoh and Kaneko, 2002), dense bitumen macadam (Woodside et al, 2003), and bulk or sheet (BMC/SMC) moulding compounds (DeRosa et al, 2005), ii) reinforcement for wood particleboard (Reynolds et al, 2004) and soils (Ahmad et al, 2012;Mujah et al, 2013); and iii) core material for textile sandwich structures (Adolphs and Branca, 2001). Most of them have not succeeded for one or both of the following rea-sons: a) tendency of the recyclate addition to negatively affect the mechanical properties of final composite; and b) negative cost balance, where mechanical recycling and sorting operational costs outweighed the market value of the virgin product (chop-ped glass fibres and calcium carbonate) (Halliwell, 2006;Palmer et al, 2009).…”
Section: Available Recycling Techniques For Thermoset Composite Matermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[3,29,12,35,37,42,32] Numerous experiments carried out on fiber-reinforced sandy soil have shown that the shear strength of sand increases when the discrete fibers are added to the soil. [2,11,12,15,18,27,28,39] G. RanjanG., Vasan R.M.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%