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Title Performance of compressed earth bricks reinforced with sugar industrial by-products bagasse and molasse: Mechanical, physical and durability properties
ID_Doc 26789
Authors Chantit, F; El Abbassi, FE; Kchikach, A
Title Performance of compressed earth bricks reinforced with sugar industrial by-products bagasse and molasse: Mechanical, physical and durability properties
Year 2024
Published
DOI 10.1016/j.jobe.2024.109403
Abstract Because sustainable development is a major concern, many studies focus on reducing greenhouse gas emissions during the manufacturing of building materials. Therefore, in this study, we aim to produce lightweight eco-friendly compressed earth bricks (CEB) using industrial sugar byproducts, sugarcane bagasse fibers (SCB) and molasse (SCM), as soil stabilizers to diminish the employment of cement. First, we investigated the physical, chemical, and mineralogical composition of the sugar by-products and the used soil. Then, we produced three types of CEB: bricks with soil and SCM (5 wt% and 10 wt%), bricks with soil and SCB (0.5 wt%, 0.75 wt%, and 1 wt%), and bricks with soil, SCB and SCM (this mixture considered two variable parameters: 5 wt % and 10 wt% of SCM, with varying SCB concentrations at three distinct levels: 0,5 wt%, 0.75 wt % and 1 wt%). The results showed that the incorporation of SCM as a stabilizer instead of cement in CEB enhanced both the dry and wet compressive strength, reaching 11.128 MPa and 9.897 MPa, respectively, which represent more than three times the results for the reference soil brick. As to the soil-SCB matrix, the incorporation of SCB decreased the compressive strength by about 36 % (from 3.338 MPa corresponding to reference brick composed only with soil to 2,142 MPa related to bricks stabilized with 1 wt% of SCB). Finally, for the composite soil-SCB-SCM, the highest value obtained was 9.309 MPa related to 10 wt% of SCM and 0.5 wt% of SCB. Moreover, the durability properties including dry abrasion, erosion, and capillarity tests were investigated and compared. The results indicated that SCM has satisfactory durability criteria while bricks stabilized with only SCB showed low resistance, especially to the capillarity test.
Author Keywords Sugar wastes; Valorization; Compressed earth bricks; Compressive strength; Durability characteristics; Circular economy
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:001237825400001
WoS Category Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
Research Area Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
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