The Influence of Accelerated Carbonation on Physical and Mechanical Properties of Hemp-Fibre-Reinforced Alkali-Activated Fly Ash and Fly Ash/Slag Mortars
Authors
Merta, IldikoPoletanovic, Bojan
Dragas, Jelena
Carevic, Vedran
Ignjatovic, Ivan
Komljenović, Miroslav M

Article (Published version)
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The physical and mechanical properties of hemp-fibre-reinforced alkali-activated (AA) mortars
under accelerated carbonation were evaluated. Two matrices of different physical and chemical
properties, i.e., a low Ca-containing and less dense one with fly ash (FA) and a high Ca-containing
and denser one with FA and granulated blast furnace slag (GBFS), were reinforced with fibres (10 mm,
0.5 vol% and 1.0 vol%). Under accelerated carbonation, due to the pore refinement resulting from
alkali and alkaline earth salt precipitation, AA hemp fibre mortars markedly (20%) decreased their
water absorption. FA-based hemp mortars increased significantly their compressive and flexural
strength (40% and 34%, respectively), whereas in the denser FA/GBFS matrix (due to the hindered
CO2 penetration, i.e., lower chemical reaction between CO2 and pore solution and gel products), only
a slight variation ( 10%) occurred. Under accelerated carbonation, embrittlement of the fibre/matrix
interface an...d of the whole composite occurred, accompanied by increased stiffness, decreased deformation
capacity and loss of the energy absorption capacity under flexure. FA-based matrices exhibited
more pronounced embrittlement than the denser FA/GBFS matrices. A combination of FA/GBFSbased
mortar reinforced with 0.5 vol% fibre dosage ensured an optimal fibre/matrix interface and
stress transfer, mitigating the embrittlement of the material under accelerated carbonation.
Keywords:
accelerated carbonation / alkali-activated mortar / hemp fibres / natural fibres / fly ash / granulated blast furnace slag / physical properties / mechanical properties / energy absorption capacitySource:
Polymers, 2022, 14Publisher:
- MDPI
Funding / projects:
- Geopolymers - technology for converting the industrial waste into functional materials (RS-34026)
- Utilization of by-products and recycled waste materials in concrete composites in the scope of sustainable construction development in Serbia: investigation and environmental assessment of possible applications (RS-36017)
- the financial support for mobility provided by the Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy (BMWFW) in Austria
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Institution/Community
Institut za multidisciplinarna istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Merta, Ildiko AU - Poletanovic, Bojan AU - Dragas, Jelena AU - Carevic, Vedran AU - Ignjatovic, Ivan AU - Komljenović, Miroslav M PY - 2022 UR - http://rimsi.imsi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1564 AB - The physical and mechanical properties of hemp-fibre-reinforced alkali-activated (AA) mortars under accelerated carbonation were evaluated. Two matrices of different physical and chemical properties, i.e., a low Ca-containing and less dense one with fly ash (FA) and a high Ca-containing and denser one with FA and granulated blast furnace slag (GBFS), were reinforced with fibres (10 mm, 0.5 vol% and 1.0 vol%). Under accelerated carbonation, due to the pore refinement resulting from alkali and alkaline earth salt precipitation, AA hemp fibre mortars markedly (20%) decreased their water absorption. FA-based hemp mortars increased significantly their compressive and flexural strength (40% and 34%, respectively), whereas in the denser FA/GBFS matrix (due to the hindered CO2 penetration, i.e., lower chemical reaction between CO2 and pore solution and gel products), only a slight variation ( 10%) occurred. Under accelerated carbonation, embrittlement of the fibre/matrix interface and of the whole composite occurred, accompanied by increased stiffness, decreased deformation capacity and loss of the energy absorption capacity under flexure. FA-based matrices exhibited more pronounced embrittlement than the denser FA/GBFS matrices. A combination of FA/GBFSbased mortar reinforced with 0.5 vol% fibre dosage ensured an optimal fibre/matrix interface and stress transfer, mitigating the embrittlement of the material under accelerated carbonation. PB - MDPI T2 - Polymers T1 - The Influence of Accelerated Carbonation on Physical and Mechanical Properties of Hemp-Fibre-Reinforced Alkali-Activated Fly Ash and Fly Ash/Slag Mortars VL - 14 DO - 10.3390/polym14091799 ER -
@article{ author = "Merta, Ildiko and Poletanovic, Bojan and Dragas, Jelena and Carevic, Vedran and Ignjatovic, Ivan and Komljenović, Miroslav M", year = "2022", abstract = "The physical and mechanical properties of hemp-fibre-reinforced alkali-activated (AA) mortars under accelerated carbonation were evaluated. Two matrices of different physical and chemical properties, i.e., a low Ca-containing and less dense one with fly ash (FA) and a high Ca-containing and denser one with FA and granulated blast furnace slag (GBFS), were reinforced with fibres (10 mm, 0.5 vol% and 1.0 vol%). Under accelerated carbonation, due to the pore refinement resulting from alkali and alkaline earth salt precipitation, AA hemp fibre mortars markedly (20%) decreased their water absorption. FA-based hemp mortars increased significantly their compressive and flexural strength (40% and 34%, respectively), whereas in the denser FA/GBFS matrix (due to the hindered CO2 penetration, i.e., lower chemical reaction between CO2 and pore solution and gel products), only a slight variation ( 10%) occurred. Under accelerated carbonation, embrittlement of the fibre/matrix interface and of the whole composite occurred, accompanied by increased stiffness, decreased deformation capacity and loss of the energy absorption capacity under flexure. FA-based matrices exhibited more pronounced embrittlement than the denser FA/GBFS matrices. A combination of FA/GBFSbased mortar reinforced with 0.5 vol% fibre dosage ensured an optimal fibre/matrix interface and stress transfer, mitigating the embrittlement of the material under accelerated carbonation.", publisher = "MDPI", journal = "Polymers", title = "The Influence of Accelerated Carbonation on Physical and Mechanical Properties of Hemp-Fibre-Reinforced Alkali-Activated Fly Ash and Fly Ash/Slag Mortars", volume = "14", doi = "10.3390/polym14091799" }
Merta, I., Poletanovic, B., Dragas, J., Carevic, V., Ignjatovic, I.,& Komljenović, M. M.. (2022). The Influence of Accelerated Carbonation on Physical and Mechanical Properties of Hemp-Fibre-Reinforced Alkali-Activated Fly Ash and Fly Ash/Slag Mortars. in Polymers MDPI., 14. https://doi.org/10.3390/polym14091799
Merta I, Poletanovic B, Dragas J, Carevic V, Ignjatovic I, Komljenović MM. The Influence of Accelerated Carbonation on Physical and Mechanical Properties of Hemp-Fibre-Reinforced Alkali-Activated Fly Ash and Fly Ash/Slag Mortars. in Polymers. 2022;14. doi:10.3390/polym14091799 .
Merta, Ildiko, Poletanovic, Bojan, Dragas, Jelena, Carevic, Vedran, Ignjatovic, Ivan, Komljenović, Miroslav M, "The Influence of Accelerated Carbonation on Physical and Mechanical Properties of Hemp-Fibre-Reinforced Alkali-Activated Fly Ash and Fly Ash/Slag Mortars" in Polymers, 14 (2022), https://doi.org/10.3390/polym14091799 . .