Use of recycled carbon fibre as an additive in the manufacture of porous bricks more durable against salt crystallization
Metadatos
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Elsevier
Materia
Bricks Carbon fibre Recycling
Fecha
2023-12-26Referencia bibliográfica
Crespo-López, Laura, et al. Use of recycled carbon fibre as an additive in the manufacture of porous bricks more durable against salt crystallization. Ceramics International 50 (2024) 9682–9696 [10.1016/j.ceramint.2023.12.287]
Patrocinador
Funding for open access charge Universidad de Granada/CBUA.; Junta de Andalucía Research Group RNM179; Research Project B-RNM-188-UGR20 of the Regional Ministry of University, Research and Innovation of the Junta de Andalucía and FEDER, a way of making EuropeResumen
Within the framework of the Sustainable Development Goals of the Agenda 2030, the circular economy is being
promoted as a means of ensuring a sustainable use of resources and a reduction in the amount of waste produced.
The aim is to reduce the demand for often scarce raw materials through the continuous reuse, recycling and
regeneration of materials and products. This paper explores the use of carbon fibre from wind turbine blades as
an additive in the production of new efficient bricks. Clay mixes with 0, 5 and 10 wt% additive were fired at
three temperatures (800, 950 and 1100 ºC) and the fired bricks were analysed from mineralogical and physical
points of view to determine their suitability for use in the construction industry. The results show that carbon
fibre improves the durability of the bricks, which became 16 % more porous as the firing temperature increased.
However, the compressive strength of the bricks with 10 wt% carbon fibre was about 50 % lower than that of the
control bricks made without additive. It is interesting to note that the distribution of the carbon fibres within the
brick varies considerably and that they are shorter and wider in the core of the samples. These results could offer
an alternative line for new product development in the brick industry. The bricks tested here are an example of a
circular economy in which waste from one industrial process (wind turbine blades) is reused as an input in
another (brick manufacture). The environmental benefits achieved are twofold: reduced demand for clay and
recycling of decommissioned turbine blades, which are currently amassed in wind turbine graveyards.