Compressive strength and bond behaviour of recycled coarse aggregate concrete
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Abstract
Sustainable resource management and development have been at the forefront of
important issues concerning the construction industry for the past several years.
Specifically, the use of sustainable building materials and the reuse and recycling of
previously used building materials is gaining acceptance and becoming common place in
many areas. As one of the most commonly used building materials in the world, concrete,
composed of aggregate, sand, cement and water, can be recycled and reused in a variety of
applications.
Using crushed concrete as fill and sub-grade material under roads, sidewalks and
foundations has been the most common of these applications. However, research has been
ongoing over the past 50 years in many countries including Germany, India, Canada,
Japan, the United States, China, and Australia investigating the use of crushed concrete
from demolished old concrete structures to fully or partially replace the virgin aggregate
used to produce new concrete for use in building and pavement applications. Producing
concrete using recycled concrete aggregates (RCA) has several advantages, namely, the
burden placed on non-renewable aggregate resources may be significantly decreased, the
service life and capacity of landfill and waste management facilities can be extended, and
the carbon dioxide emissions and traffic congestion associated with the transport of virgin
aggregates from remote sites can be reduced.
This research investigates the inter-relationships between aggregate properties, concrete
properties and the bond properties between reinforcing steel and RCA concrete.
Forty pullout tests were carried out in order to investigate the bond behaviour between
recycled coarse aggregate concrete and steel rebars. Four recycled coarse aggregate (RCA)
replacement percentages (i.e., 0%, 30%, 60% and 90%) with water-cement ratio 0.42,
0.45, 0.48, 0.51, 0.55 are considered in this paper. Based on the test results, the influences
of both recycled coarse aggregate replacement percentages and water- cement ratio on the
bond strength between the recycled coarse aggregate concrete and steel rebars were
investigated. It was found that under the equivalent mix proportion (i.e., the mix
proportions are the same, except for different recycled coarse aggregate replacement
5
percentages), the bond strength between the recycled coarse aggregate concrete and rebar
initially decreases with an increase of the recycled coarse aggregate replacement
percentage, whereas afterwards the bond strength increases with increase in replacement
level of coarse aggregate. Bond strength is maximum for 90% replacement level. With the
bond strength, compressive strength is also studied and it also shows the same trend as
bond strength. A power series relationship exists between compressive strength and bond
strength of recycled aggregate concrete. The existing models (ACI 408, Ogura-Koichi
model) proposing the square root law underestimates the bond strength of concrete.
Description
Master of Engineering (Structural Engineering), Thesis
