AI Article Synopsis

  • Agricultural waste, like corn straw, can be utilized to produce energy and potentially reused as ash in cement and mortar manufacturing.
  • This study specifically examines the auto-combustion of corn straw, analyzing the properties of the resulting corn straw ash (CSA) using advanced techniques.
  • The findings indicate that replacing 10% of Portland cement with CSA in mortars shows similar compressive strength to control samples, suggesting that auto-combustion could benefit low-income communities by reducing reliance on traditional cement and effectively managing waste.

Article Abstract

Agricultural waste availability implies the possibility of recovering energy as biomass. The collateral effect is the production of ashes that, in some cases, have the potential to be reused in the manufacture of cement, mortar, and concrete. This article presents the study of the auto-combustion (unlike all previous studies) of corn (maize) straw (stems and leaves). The auto-combustion temperature was monitored, and the obtained corn straw ash (CSA) was characterized by means of X-ray fluorescence, X-ray diffraction, thermogravimetry, and scanning electron microscopy. Finally, the behavior of ground CSA was analyzed in both the fresh state by measurement of workability on the spreading table and the hardened state by compressive strength measurement on mortars in which 10% of ordinary Portland cement (OPC) was replaced with CSA. These values were compared to both a control mortar (OPC) and a mortar in which OPC was partially replaced with 10% limestone filler. Ashes showed adequate pozzolanic reactivity because, at 90 curing days, the compressive strength of the mortars with 10% replacement of OPC with CSA was practically equal (98% of the strength) to the control mortar without pozzolan replacement. The auto-combustion of biomass is a process that can be easily available, and the results on pozzolanic reactivity of CSA are satisfactory. The auto-combustion could be used by low-income communities to reduce Portland cement clinker use and to recover waste.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11396094PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma17174374DOI Listing

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