Durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sediments

Significant volumes of sediment are annually dredged in France and all over the world and these materials may in fact be used beneficially as supplementary cementitious material. This paper studies the durability of a new cement matrix based on dredged marine sediment from the Dunkirk-Harbour (north...

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Main Authors: Mouhamadou Amar, Mahfoud Benzerzour, Amine El Mahdi Safhi, Nor-Edine Abriak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-06-01
Series:Case Studies in Construction Materials
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450951730164X
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spelling doaj-f09fe1fc5402492080c33275542265b82020-11-24T21:26:46ZengElsevierCase Studies in Construction Materials2214-50952018-06-018258276Durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sedimentsMouhamadou Amar0Mahfoud Benzerzour1Amine El Mahdi Safhi2Nor-Edine Abriak3Ecole des Mines de Douai, GCE, 764 Bd Lahure, BP 10838, 59508 Douai, France; Université Lille Nord de France, LGCgE, Villeneuve d’Ascq, France; Corresponding author at: Ecole des mines de Douai – Département Génie Civil & Environnemental, 764 Bd Lahure, BP 10838, 59508, Douai Cedex, France.Ecole des Mines de Douai, GCE, 764 Bd Lahure, BP 10838, 59508 Douai, FranceEcole des Mines de Douai, GCE, 764 Bd Lahure, BP 10838, 59508 Douai, FranceEcole des Mines de Douai, GCE, 764 Bd Lahure, BP 10838, 59508 Douai, FranceSignificant volumes of sediment are annually dredged in France and all over the world and these materials may in fact be used beneficially as supplementary cementitious material. This paper studies the durability of a new cement matrix based on dredged marine sediment from the Dunkirk-Harbour (northern France). Several techniques are used to characterise the raw sediment, such as physical properties, chemical analyses and mineralogy. X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) analysis revealed quartz, calcite and kaolinite to be the main mineral phases. In order to eliminate organic matter and activate some of those minerals, the sediment is calcined at a temperature of 850 °C for 1 h. Moreover, four blended mortars were formulated by mixing a portland cement (CEM I 52,5 N) and the calcined sediment as a partial cement substitute (0%, 10%, 20% and 30%). Reference mortars, based on the blended cement, were then prepared. This re-use cannot be substantiated or efficient without a durability study. For this purpose, the following tests were conducted on those mortars: mercury porosity, accessible water porosity, chloride permeability, freezing and thawing, external sulphate attack, alkali aggregates reaction, compressive and bending strength tests. The results of most of those tests evidenced the fact that the mortar that contains 10% of the treated sediment is as efficient and durable as the reference mortar itself. This infers that the presence of these calcined sediments improves the general behaviour of mortar. Keywords: Sediment, Characterization, Calcination, Substitution, Durabilityhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450951730164X
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mouhamadou Amar
Mahfoud Benzerzour
Amine El Mahdi Safhi
Nor-Edine Abriak
spellingShingle Mouhamadou Amar
Mahfoud Benzerzour
Amine El Mahdi Safhi
Nor-Edine Abriak
Durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sediments
Case Studies in Construction Materials
author_facet Mouhamadou Amar
Mahfoud Benzerzour
Amine El Mahdi Safhi
Nor-Edine Abriak
author_sort Mouhamadou Amar
title Durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sediments
title_short Durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sediments
title_full Durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sediments
title_fullStr Durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sediments
title_full_unstemmed Durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sediments
title_sort durability of a cementitious matrix based on treated sediments
publisher Elsevier
series Case Studies in Construction Materials
issn 2214-5095
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Significant volumes of sediment are annually dredged in France and all over the world and these materials may in fact be used beneficially as supplementary cementitious material. This paper studies the durability of a new cement matrix based on dredged marine sediment from the Dunkirk-Harbour (northern France). Several techniques are used to characterise the raw sediment, such as physical properties, chemical analyses and mineralogy. X-Ray Diffraction (XRD) analysis revealed quartz, calcite and kaolinite to be the main mineral phases. In order to eliminate organic matter and activate some of those minerals, the sediment is calcined at a temperature of 850 °C for 1 h. Moreover, four blended mortars were formulated by mixing a portland cement (CEM I 52,5 N) and the calcined sediment as a partial cement substitute (0%, 10%, 20% and 30%). Reference mortars, based on the blended cement, were then prepared. This re-use cannot be substantiated or efficient without a durability study. For this purpose, the following tests were conducted on those mortars: mercury porosity, accessible water porosity, chloride permeability, freezing and thawing, external sulphate attack, alkali aggregates reaction, compressive and bending strength tests. The results of most of those tests evidenced the fact that the mortar that contains 10% of the treated sediment is as efficient and durable as the reference mortar itself. This infers that the presence of these calcined sediments improves the general behaviour of mortar. Keywords: Sediment, Characterization, Calcination, Substitution, Durability
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450951730164X
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AT mahfoudbenzerzour durabilityofacementitiousmatrixbasedontreatedsediments
AT amineelmahdisafhi durabilityofacementitiousmatrixbasedontreatedsediments
AT noredineabriak durabilityofacementitiousmatrixbasedontreatedsediments
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