Evaluation of Solid and Hollow Sand Brick Properties with Partial Replacement of Fine Aggregates by Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag
Kamal Hosen, Alina Bărbulescu

TL;DR
This study shows that replacing 25% of fine aggregates in clay bricks with industrial slag improves strength and durability while reducing water absorption and thermal conductivity.
Contribution
The study experimentally evaluates the effects of GGBFS replacement in sand bricks and identifies 25% as the optimal level for performance improvement.
Findings
Compressive strength increased by 28.5% with 25% GGBFS replacement.
Water absorption decreased by 29.7% at 25% GGBFS.
Thermal conductivity dropped from 1.08 to 0.85 W/m·°C with 25% replacement.
Abstract
Ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBFS), an industrial by-product of steel manufacturing, can be utilized as a partial replacement for natural fine aggregate in clay brick production. Although widely used in cementitious systems, its incorporation into sand bricks and its effects on key performance parameters remain insufficiently investigated. To fill in the gap, sand bricks containing 0–35% GGBFS (at 5% intervals) were tested for compressive strength, water absorption, thermal conductivity, and efflorescence. Optimal performance was achieved at 25% replacement. Compressive strength increased from 17.5 MPa (control) to 24 MPa (28.5% improvement). Water absorption decreased from 11.67% to 8.20% (29.7% reduction), and thermal conductivity decreased from 1.08 to 0.85 W/m·°C. No efflorescence was observed at 25% GGBFS, whereas higher replacement levels (30% and 35%) exhibited…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRecycling and utilization of industrial and municipal waste in materials production · Concrete and Cement Materials Research · Recycled Aggregate Concrete Performance
