Accelerated carbonation and performance of steel slag concrete with pressurized CO2 curing

L. Mo, F. Zhang, M. Deng

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Abstract

The carbonation of various alkali industrial wastes has been widely investigated owing to its potential permanent sequestration of CO2. To make use of the carbonated products is of great significance, which may not only facilitate to cut the cost of CO2 sequestration, but also economically utilize the industrial wastes. In this study, steel slag with relatively high contents of MgO and CaO was used as replacements of Portland cement or natural aggregates to cast concrete and the concrete was exposed to CO2 curing with a CO2 pressure of 0.10 MPa. The carbonation front, mechanical strength, microstructure, and carbonate products of the concrete were investigated. Results shown that the compressive strength of the slag concrete after CO2 curing (0.1 MPa CO2 and 14d) was significantly increased, obtaining an up to five-fold increase in comparison to that of the same concrete cured in normal moist curing condition for 28d. This may attribute to the densification of the concrete microstructure caused by the formation of Ca-bearing carbonates. According to the results obtained in this study, concrete with low-carbon emissions can be produced via the accelerated carbonation of steel slag.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication5th International Conference on Accelerated Carbonation for Environmental and Material Engineering 2015
PublisherAIChE
Pages311-318
Number of pages8
ISBN (Electronic)9781510815490
StatePublished - 2015
Event5th International Conference on Accelerated Carbonation for Environmental and Material Engineering 2015 - New York, United States
Duration: 21 Jun 201524 Jun 2015

Publication series

Name5th International Conference on Accelerated Carbonation for Environmental and Material Engineering 2015

Conference

Conference5th International Conference on Accelerated Carbonation for Environmental and Material Engineering 2015
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityNew York
Period21/06/1524/06/15

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