Artificial aggregate made from waste stone sludge and waste silt

Journal of Environmental Management
Fang-Chih ChangJyh-Dong Lin

Abstract

In this research, waste stone sludge obtained from slab stone processing and waste silt from aggregate washing plants were recycled to manufacture artificial aggregate. Fine-powdered stone sludge was mixed with waste silt of larger particle size; vibratory compaction was applied for good water permeability, resulting in a smaller amount of solidifying agent being used. For the densified packing used in this study, the mix proportion of waste stone sludge to waste silt was 35:50, which produced artificial aggregate of more compact structure with water absorption rate below 0.1%. In addition, applying vibratory compaction of 33.3 Hz to the artificial aggregate and curing for 28 days doubled the compressive strength to above 29.4 MPa. Hence, recycling of waste stone sludge and waste silt for the production of artificial aggregate not only offers a feasible substitute for sand and stone, but also an ecological alternative to waste management of sludge and silt.

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Citations

Feb 1, 2013·Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association·Shao-Hua HuYen-Pei Fu
Oct 29, 2015·Environmental Science & Technology·Roy Nir LiebermanHaim Cohen
Apr 27, 2019·Scientific Reports·Francesco Di BenedettoMaurizio Romanelli
Jul 17, 2013·Materials·Francesco ColangeloRaffaele Cioffi
Aug 12, 2020·Journal of Environmental Management·Abhishek SinghalDebashish Sengupta

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