Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste

To fabricate low cost fired clay brick (FCB), rice husk ash (RHA) as agriculture waste has been successfully substituted into clay soil employing solid-state sintering process without pre-drying under natural heat process. Rice husk (RH) was first inverted into RHA as amorphous silica-based material...

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Published in:AIP Conference Proceedings
Main Author: Wahab R.A.A.; Zakri F.A.A.; Sokri N.K.N.M.; Norizam N.A.F.; Karya A.Q.; Zaid M.H.M.; Mohamad M.; Mazlan M.
Format: Conference paper
Language:English
Published: American Institute of Physics Inc. 2021
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85102352732&doi=10.1063%2f5.0042901&partnerID=40&md5=ab39a918107af265c2e711ac6c73d459
id 2-s2.0-85102352732
spelling 2-s2.0-85102352732
Wahab R.A.A.; Zakri F.A.A.; Sokri N.K.N.M.; Norizam N.A.F.; Karya A.Q.; Zaid M.H.M.; Mohamad M.; Mazlan M.
Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste
2021
AIP Conference Proceedings
2332

10.1063/5.0042901
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85102352732&doi=10.1063%2f5.0042901&partnerID=40&md5=ab39a918107af265c2e711ac6c73d459
To fabricate low cost fired clay brick (FCB), rice husk ash (RHA) as agriculture waste has been successfully substituted into clay soil employing solid-state sintering process without pre-drying under natural heat process. Rice husk (RH) was first inverted into RHA as amorphous silica-based materials by burning at 800 °C for 5 hours. Then it was admixture with clay soil (CS) with the composition of RHA were varied accordingly, molded and sintered at 900 °C and 1000 °C for 2 hours. The sintered FCB was then studied through physical and mechanical through bulk density, linear shrinkage, water absorption, and mechanical force. Higher RHA content FCB is prone to shrinkage by having pronounced increment in bulk density and linear shrinkage, meanwhile ideal mechanical force (0.2 kN) was achieved by sintered at the highest temperature. Higher silica-based (40 wt%) appeared to absorbed less water in 24 hours at about 17.25%. Hence, this novel study has been promoted less time and energy consumption by reducing long drying process of molded bricks whilst utilizing an agriculture waste for an effective solution in handling the natural clay soil shortage sources by producing 3rd class classified FCB that is applied as a basic building block in a less heavy rainfall tabulation area. © 2021 American Institute of Physics Inc.. All rights reserved.
American Institute of Physics Inc.
0094243X
English
Conference paper
All Open Access; Bronze Open Access
author Wahab R.A.A.; Zakri F.A.A.; Sokri N.K.N.M.; Norizam N.A.F.; Karya A.Q.; Zaid M.H.M.; Mohamad M.; Mazlan M.
spellingShingle Wahab R.A.A.; Zakri F.A.A.; Sokri N.K.N.M.; Norizam N.A.F.; Karya A.Q.; Zaid M.H.M.; Mohamad M.; Mazlan M.
Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste
author_facet Wahab R.A.A.; Zakri F.A.A.; Sokri N.K.N.M.; Norizam N.A.F.; Karya A.Q.; Zaid M.H.M.; Mohamad M.; Mazlan M.
author_sort Wahab R.A.A.; Zakri F.A.A.; Sokri N.K.N.M.; Norizam N.A.F.; Karya A.Q.; Zaid M.H.M.; Mohamad M.; Mazlan M.
title Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste
title_short Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste
title_full Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste
title_fullStr Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste
title_full_unstemmed Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste
title_sort Physical and mechanical properties of fired clay bricks substituted with agricultural waste
publishDate 2021
container_title AIP Conference Proceedings
container_volume 2332
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1063/5.0042901
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85102352732&doi=10.1063%2f5.0042901&partnerID=40&md5=ab39a918107af265c2e711ac6c73d459
description To fabricate low cost fired clay brick (FCB), rice husk ash (RHA) as agriculture waste has been successfully substituted into clay soil employing solid-state sintering process without pre-drying under natural heat process. Rice husk (RH) was first inverted into RHA as amorphous silica-based materials by burning at 800 °C for 5 hours. Then it was admixture with clay soil (CS) with the composition of RHA were varied accordingly, molded and sintered at 900 °C and 1000 °C for 2 hours. The sintered FCB was then studied through physical and mechanical through bulk density, linear shrinkage, water absorption, and mechanical force. Higher RHA content FCB is prone to shrinkage by having pronounced increment in bulk density and linear shrinkage, meanwhile ideal mechanical force (0.2 kN) was achieved by sintered at the highest temperature. Higher silica-based (40 wt%) appeared to absorbed less water in 24 hours at about 17.25%. Hence, this novel study has been promoted less time and energy consumption by reducing long drying process of molded bricks whilst utilizing an agriculture waste for an effective solution in handling the natural clay soil shortage sources by producing 3rd class classified FCB that is applied as a basic building block in a less heavy rainfall tabulation area. © 2021 American Institute of Physics Inc.. All rights reserved.
publisher American Institute of Physics Inc.
issn 0094243X
language English
format Conference paper
accesstype All Open Access; Bronze Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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