4.6 Article

Analysis of the Infiltration and Water Storage Performance of Recycled Brick Mix Aggregates in Sponge City Construction

Journal

WATER
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w15020363

Keywords

recycled brick aggregate; infiltration; water storage; sponge city

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With the increase of urban hardened roofs and pavements, sponge city construction has become an inevitable trend to address the serious damage to the rainwater cycle. The study on the infiltration and storage performance of recycled brick aggregate, as a highly absorbent material for permeable paving in sponge cities, is of great significance. The outcomes show that the particle size of recycled brick concrete aggregate is positively correlated with water storage capacity and has strong permeability and water storage properties, indicating great potential for application in sponge city construction.
With the gradual advancement of urbanization, urban hardened roofs and pavements are increasing, and the rainwater cycle is being seriously damaged; sponge city construction has become an inevitable trend to address this problem. The analysis of the infiltration and storage performance of recycled brick aggregate, which is highly absorbent and can be used as a permeable paving material in sponge cities, is of great significance. The study firstly designed a simulated rainfall test device, then carried out tests in terms of aggregate gradation, aggregate type, and aggregate grade, and finally analyzed its effect on the void structure and infiltration and water storage performance of recycled brick mix aggregates. The outcomes demonstrate that the particle size of recycled brick concrete aggregate is positively related to the water storage capacity, and the volume water storage rate of recycled sand is close to 26%. The fitting result of 1 h water storage rate under different dosage is 0.984. After 1 h of rainfall, the water storage rate is 3 times that of natural aggregate, and the volume water absorption rate is 2.5 times that of natural aggregate. This indicates that recycled brick concrete aggregate has strong permeability and water storage properties and has great potential for application in sponge city construction, and the study provides a reference for the optimal design of subsequent cities.

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