Comparative Life Cycle Assessment of Concrete and Steel as Construction Material
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Abstract
Concrete and Steel is one of the most widely used construction materials. The demand for
concrete and steel as a construction material is ever-growing. The construction industry
accounts for almost 75% of total raw material used. This is an obvious drain on natural
resources and has a major impact on the surrounding environment. Construction materials
are also responsible for a relatively large portion of the global CO2 emissions. The
commercial construction industry is dominated by the use of steel and in-situ concrete as
building materials. It is intuitive then, to state that these two materials and their respective
production flows have a significant impact on the environment, simply because of the
amount of material being produced and consumed in the building industry today. In
addition, due to drastic increases in energy prices and potential shortages in the future, the
amount of energy consumed in the production of construction materials (embodied
energy) and the amount of energy used over a projected life span (operational energy) are
becoming increasingly more important to builders, designers, and owners of buildings.
The growing trend in the India, and elsewhere in the world, is towards eco-friendly
design. In the last several years, the concrete and steel industries have spent significant
resources to promote their material as the optimum solution for sustainable building
design. Because natural resource consumption, air emissions, and the amount of
embodied energy are all important drivers for the push towards sustainability, this study
will compare those factors and quantify the differences between what is necessary for the
construction of concrete- and steel-frame structures.
The purpose of this thesis is to utilize the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) method to
compare the environmental impacts created by the steel and concrete construction
industry at the lowest common performance level, in this case the structural shell of a
typical building in a given geographical area. The study will include all major product
systems and material flows involved with concrete or steel construction and quantify their
impacts in terms of total energy requirement, natural resources consumed, and harmful air
emissions, specifically as they relate to global warming potential.
Description
ME, CED, Dissertation
