Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique

The porous composites of clay and fly ash have the potential to be used in many fields, such as catalyst support and gas adsorbents. In this study, various ratios of fly ash (1–2) with different percentage of suspension (50–70 wt%) were applied to produce porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric...

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Published in:Journal of Material Cycles and Waste Management
Main Author: Chan W.H.; Mazlee M.N.; Ahmad Z.A.; Ishak M.A.M.; Shamsul J.B.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Japan 2017
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84960407112&doi=10.1007%2fs10163-016-0481-4&partnerID=40&md5=ac1be728d7b1976c662151dbbd10fd5f
id 2-s2.0-84960407112
spelling 2-s2.0-84960407112
Chan W.H.; Mazlee M.N.; Ahmad Z.A.; Ishak M.A.M.; Shamsul J.B.
Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique
2017
Journal of Material Cycles and Waste Management
19
2
10.1007/s10163-016-0481-4
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84960407112&doi=10.1007%2fs10163-016-0481-4&partnerID=40&md5=ac1be728d7b1976c662151dbbd10fd5f
The porous composites of clay and fly ash have the potential to be used in many fields, such as catalyst support and gas adsorbents. In this study, various ratios of fly ash (1–2) with different percentage of suspension (50–70 wt%) were applied to produce porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique. Fabrication process starts by mixing clay and fly ash in distilled water to form slurry. The process is followed by fully immersing polymer sponge in slurry. The excess slurry is then removed through squeezing. Finally, the sponge coated with slurry is sintered at 500 and 1250 °C for 1 h. It is found that the compressive strength of porous composites improves significantly (0.178–1.28 MPa) when the amount of clay-fly ash suspension mixture (50–70 wt%) increases. The compressive strength of porous composites is mainly attributed to the mullite, quartz and amorphous phase formations. These results are supported by X-ray diffraction analysis. On the other hand, increase in the amount of suspension reduces the apparent density (from 2.44 to 2.32 g/cm3) and porosity (from 97 to 85 %). The reduction in apparent density is believed to be caused by the presence of high fly ash content in porous composites. The melted fly ash cenospheres have closed the internal pores and increased density of samples. Higher suspension level not only reduces porosity, but also increases close pores of the porous composites. The results are justified through the observation from the structures of porous clay-fly ash composites. © 2016, Springer Japan.
Springer Japan
14384957
English
Article

author Chan W.H.; Mazlee M.N.; Ahmad Z.A.; Ishak M.A.M.; Shamsul J.B.
spellingShingle Chan W.H.; Mazlee M.N.; Ahmad Z.A.; Ishak M.A.M.; Shamsul J.B.
Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique
author_facet Chan W.H.; Mazlee M.N.; Ahmad Z.A.; Ishak M.A.M.; Shamsul J.B.
author_sort Chan W.H.; Mazlee M.N.; Ahmad Z.A.; Ishak M.A.M.; Shamsul J.B.
title Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique
title_short Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique
title_full Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique
title_fullStr Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique
title_full_unstemmed Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique
title_sort Effects of fly ash addition on physical properties of porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique
publishDate 2017
container_title Journal of Material Cycles and Waste Management
container_volume 19
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10163-016-0481-4
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84960407112&doi=10.1007%2fs10163-016-0481-4&partnerID=40&md5=ac1be728d7b1976c662151dbbd10fd5f
description The porous composites of clay and fly ash have the potential to be used in many fields, such as catalyst support and gas adsorbents. In this study, various ratios of fly ash (1–2) with different percentage of suspension (50–70 wt%) were applied to produce porous clay-fly ash composites via polymeric replica technique. Fabrication process starts by mixing clay and fly ash in distilled water to form slurry. The process is followed by fully immersing polymer sponge in slurry. The excess slurry is then removed through squeezing. Finally, the sponge coated with slurry is sintered at 500 and 1250 °C for 1 h. It is found that the compressive strength of porous composites improves significantly (0.178–1.28 MPa) when the amount of clay-fly ash suspension mixture (50–70 wt%) increases. The compressive strength of porous composites is mainly attributed to the mullite, quartz and amorphous phase formations. These results are supported by X-ray diffraction analysis. On the other hand, increase in the amount of suspension reduces the apparent density (from 2.44 to 2.32 g/cm3) and porosity (from 97 to 85 %). The reduction in apparent density is believed to be caused by the presence of high fly ash content in porous composites. The melted fly ash cenospheres have closed the internal pores and increased density of samples. Higher suspension level not only reduces porosity, but also increases close pores of the porous composites. The results are justified through the observation from the structures of porous clay-fly ash composites. © 2016, Springer Japan.
publisher Springer Japan
issn 14384957
language English
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