Life Cycle Assessment of Mortars with Incorporation of Industrial Wastes

The production of waste is increasing yearly and, without a viable recycle or reutilization solution, waste is sent to landfills, where it can take thousand to years to degrade. Simultaneously, for the production of new materials, some industries continue to ignore the potential of wastes and keep o...

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Main Authors: Catarina Brazão Farinha, José Dinis Silvestre, Jorge de Brito, Maria do Rosário Veiga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-07-01
Series:Fibers
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6439/7/7/59
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spelling doaj-e565ec972ccf428f801d87c2e9d2f3ac2020-11-25T02:33:23ZengMDPI AGFibers2079-64392019-07-01775910.3390/fib7070059fib7070059Life Cycle Assessment of Mortars with Incorporation of Industrial WastesCatarina Brazão Farinha0José Dinis Silvestre1Jorge de Brito2Maria do Rosário Veiga3CERIS, Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon, Av. Rovisco Pais, 1-1049-001 Lisbon, PortugalCERIS, Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon, Av. Rovisco Pais, 1-1049-001 Lisbon, PortugalCERIS, Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon, Av. Rovisco Pais, 1-1049-001 Lisbon, PortugalNational Laboratory for Civil Engineering, Av. do Brasil 101, 1700-066 Lisbon, PortugalThe production of waste is increasing yearly and, without a viable recycle or reutilization solution, waste is sent to landfills, where it can take thousand to years to degrade. Simultaneously, for the production of new materials, some industries continue to ignore the potential of wastes and keep on using natural resources for production. The incorporation of waste materials in mortars is a possible solution to avoid landfilling, through their recycling or reutilization. However, no evaluation of their “sustainability” in terms of environmental performance is available in the literature. In this sense, in this research a life cycle assessment was performed on mortars, namely renders, with incorporation of industrials wastes replacing sand and/or cement. For that purpose, eight environmental impact categories (abiotic depletion potential, global warming potential, ozone depletion potential, photochemical ozone creation potential, acidification potential, eutrophication potential, use of non-renewable primary energy resources, and use of renewable primary energy resources) within a “cradle to gate” boundary were analyzed for 19 mortars with incorporation of several industrial wastes: sanitary ware, glass fiber reinforced polymer, forest biomass ashes, and textile fibers. Sixteen out of the 19 mortars under analysis presented, in all environmental impact categories, an equal or better environment performance than a common mortar (used as a reference). The benefits in some environmental impacts were over 20%.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6439/7/7/59life cycle assessment (LCA)mortarwastecementglobal warmingabiotic depletionphotochemical ozoneacidificationeutrophication
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catarina Brazão Farinha
José Dinis Silvestre
Jorge de Brito
Maria do Rosário Veiga
spellingShingle Catarina Brazão Farinha
José Dinis Silvestre
Jorge de Brito
Maria do Rosário Veiga
Life Cycle Assessment of Mortars with Incorporation of Industrial Wastes
Fibers
life cycle assessment (LCA)
mortar
waste
cement
global warming
abiotic depletion
photochemical ozone
acidification
eutrophication
author_facet Catarina Brazão Farinha
José Dinis Silvestre
Jorge de Brito
Maria do Rosário Veiga
author_sort Catarina Brazão Farinha
title Life Cycle Assessment of Mortars with Incorporation of Industrial Wastes
title_short Life Cycle Assessment of Mortars with Incorporation of Industrial Wastes
title_full Life Cycle Assessment of Mortars with Incorporation of Industrial Wastes
title_fullStr Life Cycle Assessment of Mortars with Incorporation of Industrial Wastes
title_full_unstemmed Life Cycle Assessment of Mortars with Incorporation of Industrial Wastes
title_sort life cycle assessment of mortars with incorporation of industrial wastes
publisher MDPI AG
series Fibers
issn 2079-6439
publishDate 2019-07-01
description The production of waste is increasing yearly and, without a viable recycle or reutilization solution, waste is sent to landfills, where it can take thousand to years to degrade. Simultaneously, for the production of new materials, some industries continue to ignore the potential of wastes and keep on using natural resources for production. The incorporation of waste materials in mortars is a possible solution to avoid landfilling, through their recycling or reutilization. However, no evaluation of their “sustainability” in terms of environmental performance is available in the literature. In this sense, in this research a life cycle assessment was performed on mortars, namely renders, with incorporation of industrials wastes replacing sand and/or cement. For that purpose, eight environmental impact categories (abiotic depletion potential, global warming potential, ozone depletion potential, photochemical ozone creation potential, acidification potential, eutrophication potential, use of non-renewable primary energy resources, and use of renewable primary energy resources) within a “cradle to gate” boundary were analyzed for 19 mortars with incorporation of several industrial wastes: sanitary ware, glass fiber reinforced polymer, forest biomass ashes, and textile fibers. Sixteen out of the 19 mortars under analysis presented, in all environmental impact categories, an equal or better environment performance than a common mortar (used as a reference). The benefits in some environmental impacts were over 20%.
topic life cycle assessment (LCA)
mortar
waste
cement
global warming
abiotic depletion
photochemical ozone
acidification
eutrophication
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-6439/7/7/59
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