Potential Utilization of Municipal Solid Waste Ash in Concrete Blends in Israel Part A: Municipal Waste Combustion in the Laboratory
Sarit Nov, Shay Barak, Haim Cohen, Yaniv Knop

TL;DR
This study explores using ash from Israeli municipal waste as a sustainable material in concrete, aiming to reduce landfill waste and support eco-friendly construction.
Contribution
The study establishes a lab-scale process for incinerating Israeli MSW and identifies its ash as a potential partial cement and aggregate substitute.
Findings
MSW ash in Israel contains calcium-based minerals suitable for concrete blends.
The ash shows potential pozzolanic behavior and can replace cement and fine aggregates.
A lab-scale incineration process was successfully developed for Israeli MSW.
Abstract
This study investigated the potential use of ash derived from Municipal Solid Waste (MSW), typically destined for landfill in Israel, as a partial replacement for cement and aggregates in concrete mixtures, aligning with circular economy and sustainable construction objectives. MSW samples (post-metal and large plastic remains removal), supplied by the Dudaim Reclamation Center in Israel, were incinerated under controlled conditions in an upgraded laboratory furnace to produce ash. The ash content in the Israeli MSW was 18% ash. The ash consisted mainly of calcium-based minerals, including anhydrite (CaSO4), alite (3CaO·SiO2), and calcite (CaCO3), with minor quartz content, indicating potential pozzolanic behavior. The characterization results showed that appreciable amounts of ash produced from MSW incineration in Israel can be used as a partial replacement for cement and fine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRecycling and utilization of industrial and municipal waste in materials production · Concrete and Cement Materials Research · Coal and Its By-products
