Lowland Technology International
Vol 11 No 1, June (2009)

APPLICATION OF BIOMASS FLY ASH AS A POZZOLANIC MATERIAL FOR STABILIZATION OF LOW-SWELLING CLAY

R. Rachan (Unknown)
W. Chim-oye (Unknown)
S. Horpibulsuk (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
07 Jun 2009

Abstract

The present paper investigates the possibility of utilizing biomass fly ash to partially replace Type I Portland cement for stabilization of a low-swelling clay. It is found that the fly ash can be used as a pozzolanic material. The 10% replacement ratio is an effective ratio where the input of fly ash is sufficient for secondary reaction. The influential parameter controlling the strength development of blended cement is clay-water/cement ratio, wc/C. The cement content of the blended cement is the summation of the input of cement, Ci and the equivalent cement, Ce. The Ce is determined based on the concept of an efficiency factor (k), which is adopted as a measure of the relative performance of supplementary cementing material compared with Type I Portland cement. The Ce is equivalent to kF where F is fly ash content and k is efficiency factor. From the analysis, the value of k is dependent upon the replacement ratio and curing time, and irrespective of binder content and water content. A phenomenological model for assessing the strength development is introduced and verified. It can possibly be applied as a simple and rational tool for predicting the strength development of other blended cement stabilized low swelling clays.

Copyrights © 2009






Journal Info

Abbrev

ialt_lti

Publisher

Subject

Civil Engineering, Building, Construction & Architecture Engineering Transportation

Description

The Lowland Technology International Journal presents activity and research developments in Geotechnical Engineering, Water Resources Engineering, Structural Engineering, Transportation Engineering, Urban Planning, Coastal Engineering, Disaster Prevention and Mitigation ...