4.6 Article

Properties of a New Insulation Material Glass Bubble in Geopolymer Concrete

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14040809

Keywords

glass bubble; geopolymer concrete; thermal conductivity; specific heat; thermal diffusivity

Funding

  1. Centre of Excellent Geopolymer and Green Technology (CeGeoGTech), UniMAP
  2. European Union [PRI-GeoC-689857]

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This paper presents analytical research on a novel material, geopolymer concrete, which includes glass bubble, fly ash, and alkaline activators. The inclusion of glass bubble in the composite improved the physicomechanical and thermal insulating properties, making it a viable option for use in the construction industry.
This paper details analytical research results into a novel geopolymer concrete embedded with glass bubble as its thermal insulating material, fly ash as its precursor material, and a combination of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and sodium silicate (Na2SiO3) as its alkaline activator to form a geopolymer system. The workability, density, compressive strength (per curing days), and water absorption of the sample loaded at 10% glass bubble (loading level determined to satisfy the minimum strength requirement of a load-bearing structure) were 70 mm, 2165 kg/m(3), 52.58 MPa (28 days), 54.92 MPa (60 days), and 65.25 MPa (90 days), and 3.73 %, respectively. The thermal conductivity for geopolymer concrete decreased from 1.47 to 1.19 W/mK, while the thermal diffusivity decreased from 1.88 to 1.02 mm(2)/s due to increased specific heat from 0.96 to 1.73 MJ/m(3)K. The improved physicomechanical and thermal (insulating) properties resulting from embedding a glass bubble as an insulating material into geopolymer concrete resulted in a viable composite for use in the construction industry.

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