The Feasibility of Developing a Construction Material From Basaltic Quarry Waste and Recycled High-Density Polyethylene
Johnson Ngugi, George O. Rading, Thomas O. Mbuya

TL;DR
This study explores using basaltic quarry waste and recycled HDPE to create sustainable construction materials with improved properties.
Contribution
The feasibility of using basaltic quarry waste as a filler in HDPE for construction materials is demonstrated.
Findings
BQW improved thermal stability and mechanical properties of HDPE at certain filler loadings.
Poor adhesion between BQW and HDPE was observed, but water absorption remained low.
The material is suitable for making roofing tiles and paving blocks.
Abstract
Quarry waste is a fine rock aggregate produced as a by-product of the rock-crushing process in quarries which is environmentally hazardous when poorly disposed. This paper presents the results of a study carried out to explore the feasibility of recycling basaltic quarry waste (BQW) with waste high-density polyethylene (HDPE) into sustainable construction materials. Recycled HDPE/BQW formulations were melt-mixed in a single-screw extruder and then transfer-moulded into experimental samples. No significant chemical transformations were detected by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Thermogravimetric analyses showed an improvement in the thermal stability of HDPE with the addition of BQW. Scanning electron microscopy imaging revealed generally poor adhesion between the two phases. Both tensile and impact strength initially increased but decreased at higher filler loading. However,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNatural Fiber Reinforced Composites · Innovative concrete reinforcement materials · Innovations in Concrete and Construction Materials
