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Keywords = steel furnace slag (SFS)

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23 pages, 4661 KiB  
Article
Microstructural, Mechanical and Fresh-State Performance of BOF Steel Slag in Alkali-Activated Binders: Experimental Characterization and Parametric Mix Design Method
by Lucas B. R. Araújo, Daniel L. L. Targino, Lucas F. A. L. Babadopulos, Heloina N. Costa, Antonio E. B. Cabral and Juceline B. S. Bastos
Buildings 2025, 15(12), 2056; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15122056 - 15 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 571
Abstract
Alkali-activated binders (AAB) are a suitable and sustainable alternative to ordinary Portland cement (OPC), with reductions in natural resource usage and environmental emissions in regions where the necessary industrial residues are available. Despite its potential, the lack of mix design methods still limits [...] Read more.
Alkali-activated binders (AAB) are a suitable and sustainable alternative to ordinary Portland cement (OPC), with reductions in natural resource usage and environmental emissions in regions where the necessary industrial residues are available. Despite its potential, the lack of mix design methods still limits its applications. This paper proposes a systematic parametric validation for AAB mix design applied to pastes and concretes, valorizing steel slag as precursors. The composed binders are based on coal fly ash (FA) and Basic Oxygen Furnace (BOF) steel slag. These precursors were activated with sodium silicate (Na2SiO3) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) alkaline solutions. A parametric investigation was performed on the mix design parameters, sweeping the (i) alkali content from 6% to 10%, (ii) silica modulus (SiO2/Na2O) from 0.75 to 1.75, and (iii) ash-to-slag ratios in the proportions of 75:25 and 50:50, using parametric intervals retrieved from the literature. These variations were analyzed using response surface methodology (RSM) to develop a mechanical model of the compressive strength of the hardened paste. Flowability, yield stress, and setting time were evaluated. Statistical analyses, ANOVA and the Duncan test, validated the model and identified interactions between variables. The concrete formulation design was based on aggregates packing analysis with different paste contents (from 32% up to 38.4%), aiming at self-compacting concrete (SCC) with slump flow class 1 (SF1). The influence of the curing condition was evaluated, varying with ambient and thermal conditions, at 25 °C and 65 °C, respectively, for the initial 24 h. The results showed that lower silica modulus (0.75) achieved the highest compressive strength at 80.1 MPa (28 d) for pastes compressive strength, densifying the composite matrix. The concrete application of the binder achieved SF1 fluidity, with 575 mm spread, 64.1 MPa of compressive strength, and 26.2 GPa of Young’s modulus in thermal cure conditions. These findings demonstrate the potential for developing sustainable high-performance materials based on parametric design of AAB formulations and mix design. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Cementitious Materials)
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21 pages, 6357 KiB  
Article
Impact of Curing Temperature and Steel Slag Aggregates on High-Strength Self-Compacting Alkali-Activated Concrete
by Lucas B. R. Araújo, Daniel L. L. Targino, Lucas F. A. L. Babadopulos, Antonin Fabbri, Antonio Eduardo. B. Cabral, Rime Chehade and Heloina N. Costa
Buildings 2025, 15(3), 457; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15030457 - 1 Feb 2025
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 1254
Abstract
There is a growing demand for sustainable solutions in civil engineering concerning the carbon footprint of cementitious composites. Alkali-Activated Binders (AAB) are materials with great potential to replace ordinary Portland cement (OPC), with similar strength levels and lower environmental impact. Despite their improved [...] Read more.
There is a growing demand for sustainable solutions in civil engineering concerning the carbon footprint of cementitious composites. Alkali-Activated Binders (AAB) are materials with great potential to replace ordinary Portland cement (OPC), with similar strength levels and lower environmental impact. Despite their improved environmental performance, their durability remains a gap in the literature, influenced by aspects of mechanical behavior, physical properties, and microstructure. This paper aims to assess the impact of steel slag aggregates and curing temperature of a proposed AAB based concrete formulation by characterizing fresh state, mechanical behavior, and microstructure. The proposed AAB is composed of fly ash (FA) and basic oxygen furnace (BOF) steel slag (SS) as precursors, sodium silicate and sodium hydroxide solution as activators, in total replacement of OPC, using baosteel slag short flow (BSSF) SS as aggregate in comparison with natural aggregate. The concrete formulation was designed to achieve a high-performance concrete (HPC) and a self-compacting concrete (SCC) behavior. Mechanical characterization encompassed hardened (compressive strength and Young’s modulus), fresh state (J-ring, slump flow, and T50), and durability tests (scanning electronic microscopy, water penetration under pressure, and chloride ion penetration). The compressive strength (64.1 ± 3.6 MPa) achieves the requirements of HPC, while the fresh state results fulfill the SCC requirements as well, with a spread diameter from 550 mm to 650 mm (SF-1 class). However, the flow time ranges from 3.5 s to 13.8 s. There was evidence of high chloride penetrability, affected by the lower electrical resistance inherent to the material. Otherwise, there was a low water penetration under pressure (3.5 cm), which indicates a well-consolidated microstructure with low connected porosity. Therefore, the durability assessment demonstrated a divergence in the results. These results indicate that the current durability tests of cementitious materials are not feasible for AAB, requiring adapted procedures for AAB composite characterization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Materials, and Repair & Renovation)
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15 pages, 1612 KiB  
Article
An Analysis of Long-Process Ironmaking in a Reduction Smelting Furnace with Hydrogen-Enriched Conditions
by Haifeng Li and Jingran Chen
Metals 2023, 13(10), 1756; https://doi.org/10.3390/met13101756 - 16 Oct 2023
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 4052
Abstract
The blast furnace and basic oxygen furnace (BF-BOF) is still the main process used for the production of iron and steel in China. With the approach of the “dual carbon” target, the iron and steel industry needs to transform and upgrade to “green” [...] Read more.
The blast furnace and basic oxygen furnace (BF-BOF) is still the main process used for the production of iron and steel in China. With the approach of the “dual carbon” target, the iron and steel industry needs to transform and upgrade to “green” and “low-carbon” practices. At present, the low-carbon hydrogen metallurgy technology route based on hydrogen instead of carbon is mainly adopted at home and abroad, and the domestic route is mainly based on oxygen-rich BFs and hydrogen-based shaft furnaces (SFs). It promotes the transformation of the traditional BF to hydrogen-rich, oxygen-rich, and carbon-recycled (Hy-O-CR) technology. A new ironmaking system and method for a reduction smelting furnace (RSF) with Hy-O-CR is presented in this paper. The ironmaking system includes nine sets of equipment, such as an RSF, gas dust collector, dryer, CO2 separator, electrolytic water device, blower, heat exchanger, storage tank of reduction gas, and chimney. From top to bottom, the RSF includes an indirect reduction zone, a soft melting dripping zone, and a coke combustion zone. The ironmaking methods include coke and ore mixed charging, injection of the mixed reduction gas composed of electrolytic green hydrogen and circulating gas from the furnace gas into the indirect reduction zone, injection of oxygen into the coke combustion zone, CO2 recovery of the furnace top gas, and slag and iron treatment. By redesigning the size of the furnace type and optimizing the parameters, the metallization rate of the indirect reduction zone can be as high as 85–95%, and the carbon consumption per ton of hot metal can be greatly reduced. By using oxygen to recycle the reduction gas produced by its reactor, the process achieves the goal of reducing CO2 emissions by more than 50%, thus realizing green and low-carbon metallurgy. Full article
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23 pages, 5230 KiB  
Article
Effects of Steel Fibers (SF) and Ground Granulated Blast Furnace Slag (GGBS) on Recycled Aggregate Concrete
by Jawad Ahmad, Rebeca Martínez-García, Maciej Szelag, Jesús de-Prado-Gil, Riadh Marzouki, Muwaffaq Alqurashi and Enas E. Hussein
Materials 2021, 14(24), 7497; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14247497 - 7 Dec 2021
Cited by 40 | Viewed by 4285
Abstract
Recycled aggregate is a good option to be used in concrete production as a coarse aggregate that results in environmental benefits as well as sustainable development. However, recycled aggregate causes a reduction in the mechanical and durability performance of concrete. On the other [...] Read more.
Recycled aggregate is a good option to be used in concrete production as a coarse aggregate that results in environmental benefits as well as sustainable development. However, recycled aggregate causes a reduction in the mechanical and durability performance of concrete. On the other hand, the removal of industrial waste would be considerably decreased if it could be incorporated into concrete production. One of these possibilities is the substitution of the cement by slag, which enhances the concrete poor properties of recycled aggregate concrete as well as provides a decrease in cement consumption, reducing carbon dioxide production, while resolving a waste management challenge. Furthermore, steel fiber was also added to enhance the tensile capacity of recycled aggregate concrete. The main goal of this study was to investigate the characteristics of concrete using ground granulated blast-furnace slag (GGBS) as a binding material on recycled aggregate fibers reinforced concrete (RAFRC). Mechanical performance was assessed through compressive strength and split tensile strength, while durability aspects were studied through water absorption, acid resistance, and dry shrinkage. The results detected from the different experiments depict that, at an optimum dose (40% RCA, 20%GGBS, and 2.0%), compressive and split tensile strength were 39% and 120% more than the reference concrete, respectively. Furthermore, acid resistance at the optimum dose was 36% more than the reference concrete. Furthermore, decreased water absorption and dry shrinkage cracks were observed with the substitution of GGBS into RAFRC. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nanotechnology for Cement Composite Materials)
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24 pages, 10599 KiB  
Article
Mechanical and Microstructural Characterization of Quarry Rock Dust Incorporated Steel Fiber Reinforced Geopolymer Concrete and Residual Properties after Exposure to Elevated Temperatures
by Muhammad Ibraheem, Faheem Butt, Rana Muhammad Waqas, Khadim Hussain, Rana Faisal Tufail, Naveed Ahmad, Ksenia Usanova and Muhammad Ali Musarat
Materials 2021, 14(22), 6890; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14226890 - 15 Nov 2021
Cited by 26 | Viewed by 2993
Abstract
The purpose of this research is to study the effects of quarry rock dust (QRD) and steel fibers (SF) inclusion on the fresh, mechanical, and microstructural properties of fly ash (FA) and ground granulated blast furnace slag (SG)-based geopolymer concrete (GPC) exposed to [...] Read more.
The purpose of this research is to study the effects of quarry rock dust (QRD) and steel fibers (SF) inclusion on the fresh, mechanical, and microstructural properties of fly ash (FA) and ground granulated blast furnace slag (SG)-based geopolymer concrete (GPC) exposed to elevated temperatures. Such types of ternary mixes were prepared by blending waste materials from different industries, including QRD, SG, and FA, with alkaline activator solutions. The multiphysical models show that the inclusion of steel fibers and binders can enhance the mechanical properties of GPC. In this study, a total of 18 different mix proportions were designed with different proportions of QRD (0%, 5%, 10%, 15%, and 20%) and steel fibers (0.75% and 1.5%). The slag was replaced by different proportions of QRD in fly ash, and SG-based GPC mixes to study the effect of QRD incorporation. The mechanical properties of specimens, i.e., compressive strength, splitting tensile strength, and flexural strength, were determined by testing cubes, cylinders, and prisms, respectively, at different ages (7, 28, and 56 days). The specimens were also heated up to 800 °C to evaluate the resistance of specimens to elevated temperature in terms of residual compressive strength and weight loss. The test results showed that the mechanical strength of GPC mixes (without steel fibers) increased by 6–11%, with an increase in QRD content up to 15% at the age of 28 days. In contrast, more than 15% of QRD contents resulted in decreasing the mechanical strength properties. Incorporating steel fibers in a fraction of 0.75% by volume increased the compressive, tensile, and flexural strength of GPC mixes by 15%, 23%, and 34%, respectively. However, further addition of steel fibers at 1.5% by volume lowered the mechanical strength properties. The optimal mixture of QRD incorporated FA-SG-based GPC (QFS-GPC) was observed with 15% QRD and 0.75% steel fibers contents considering the performance in workability and mechanical properties. The results also showed that under elevated temperatures up to 800 °C, the weight loss of QFS-GPC specimens persistently increased with a consistent decrease in the residual compressive strength for increasing QRD content and temperature. Furthermore, the microstructure characterization of QRD blended GPC mixes were also carried out by performing scanning electron microscopy (SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), and energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS). Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Developments in Geopolymers and Alkali-Activated Materials)
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27 pages, 675 KiB  
Review
A Review of the Influence of Steel Furnace Slag Type on the Properties of Cementitious Composites
by Alexander S. Brand and Ebenezer O. Fanijo
Appl. Sci. 2020, 10(22), 8210; https://doi.org/10.3390/app10228210 - 19 Nov 2020
Cited by 74 | Viewed by 8202
Abstract
The type of steel furnace slag (SFS), including electric arc furnace (EAF) slag, basic oxygen furnace (BOF) slag, ladle metallurgy furnace (LMF) slag, and argon oxygen decarburization (AOD) slag, can significantly affect the composite properties when used as an aggregate or as a [...] Read more.
The type of steel furnace slag (SFS), including electric arc furnace (EAF) slag, basic oxygen furnace (BOF) slag, ladle metallurgy furnace (LMF) slag, and argon oxygen decarburization (AOD) slag, can significantly affect the composite properties when used as an aggregate or as a supplementary cementitious material in bound applications, such as concretes, mortars, alkali-activated materials, and stabilized soils. This review seeks to collate the findings from the literature to express the variability in material properties and to attempt to explain the source(s) of the variability. It was found that SFS composition and properties can be highly variable, including different compositions on the exterior and interior of a given SFS particle, which can affect bonding conditions and be one source of variability on composite properties. A suite of tests is proposed to better assess a given SFS stock for potential use in bound applications; at a minimum, the SFS should be evaluated for free CaO content, expansion potential, mineralogical composition, cementitious composite mechanical properties, and chemical composition with secondary tests, including cementitious composite durability properties, microstructural characterization, and free MgO content. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Utilization of Steel Furnace Slag in Cementitious Composites)
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18 pages, 2147 KiB  
Article
Adsorption Media for the Removal of Soluble Phosphorus from Subsurface Drainage Water
by Jessica K. Hauda, Steven I. Safferman and Ehsan Ghane
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17(20), 7693; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17207693 - 21 Oct 2020
Cited by 17 | Viewed by 3436
Abstract
Phosphorus (P) is a valuable, nonrenewable resource in agriculture promoting crop growth. P losses through surface runoff and subsurface drainage discharge beneath the root zone is a loss of investment. P entering surface water contributes to eutrophication of freshwater environments, impacting tourism, human [...] Read more.
Phosphorus (P) is a valuable, nonrenewable resource in agriculture promoting crop growth. P losses through surface runoff and subsurface drainage discharge beneath the root zone is a loss of investment. P entering surface water contributes to eutrophication of freshwater environments, impacting tourism, human health, environmental safety, and property values. Soluble P (SP) from subsurface drainage is nearly all bioavailable and is a significant contributor to freshwater eutrophication. The research objective was to select phosphorus sorbing media (PSM) best suited for removing SP from subsurface drainage discharge. From the preliminary research and literature, PSM with this potential were steel furnace slag (SFS) and a nano-engineered media (NEM). The PSM were evaluated using typical subsurface drainage P concentrations in column experiments, then with an economic analysis for a study site in Michigan. Both the SFS and generalized NEM (GNEM) removed soluble reactive phosphorus from 0.50 to below 0.05 mg/L in laboratory column experiments. The most cost-effective option from the study site was the use of the SFS, then disposing it each year, costing $906/hectare/year for the case study. GNEM that was regenerated onsite had a very similar cost. The most expensive option was the use of GNEM to remove P, including regeneration at the manufacturer, costing $1641/hectare/year. This study suggests that both SFS and NEM are both suited for treating drainage discharge. The use of SFS was more economical for the study site, but each site needs to be individually considered. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Technologies to Manage Nutrients in Wastes)
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19 pages, 1936 KiB  
Article
Stabilization of a Clayey Soil with Ladle Metallurgy Furnace Slag Fines
by Alexander S. Brand, Punit Singhvi, Ebenezer O. Fanijo and Erol Tutumluer
Materials 2020, 13(19), 4251; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13194251 - 24 Sep 2020
Cited by 42 | Viewed by 4457
Abstract
The research study described in this paper investigated the potential to use steel furnace slag (SFS) as a stabilizing additive for clayey soils. Even though SFS has limited applications in civil engineering infrastructure due to the formation of deleterious expansion in the presence [...] Read more.
The research study described in this paper investigated the potential to use steel furnace slag (SFS) as a stabilizing additive for clayey soils. Even though SFS has limited applications in civil engineering infrastructure due to the formation of deleterious expansion in the presence of water, the free CaO and free MgO contents allow for the SFS to be a potentially suitable candidate for clayey soil stabilization and improvement. In this investigation, a kaolinite clay was stabilized with 10% and 15% ladle metallurgy furnace (LMF) slag fines by weight. This experimental study also included testing of the SFS mixtures with the activator calcium chloride (CaCl2), which was hypothesized to accelerate the hydration of the dicalcium silicate phase in the SFS, but the results show that the addition of CaCl2 was not found to be effective. Relative to the unmodified clay, the unconfined compressive strength increased by 67% and 91% when 10% and 15% LMF slag were utilized, respectively. Likewise, the dynamic modulus increased by 212% and 221% by adding 10% and 15% LMF slag, respectively. Specifically, the LMF slag fines are posited to primarily contribute to a mechanical rather than chemical stabilization mechanism. Overall, these findings suggest the effective utilization of SFS as a soil stabilization admixture to overcome problems associated with dispersive soils, but further research is required. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Construction and Building Materials)
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