4.6 Article

Preparation and Properties of Foam Concrete Incorporating Fly Ash

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15186287

Keywords

foam concrete; foaming agent; fly ash; foam stabiliser; thermal conductivity; compressive strength; porosity

Funding

  1. key R&D projects of Ningxia Province of China [2021BEE03004, 2021BEG02014]
  2. First Class Discipline Construction in Ningxia Colleges and Universities (discipline of water conservancy engineering) [NXYLXK 2021A03]
  3. National innovation and entrepreneurship training program for College Students [G2021107490025]
  4. Construction project of joint training demonstration base for research, production and teaching integration of Ningxia University

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This study investigates the preparation and properties of foam concrete, and the impact of different materials on its performance. The results demonstrate that the foam concrete's characteristics, such as dry bulk density, compressive strength, and thermal conductivity, are affected by the foaming agent, foam stabiliser, and fly ash content.
Foam concrete is fire resistant and durable and has broad applicability as a building insulation material. However, cement has high energy consumption and causes pollution, necessitating an environment-friendly cementitious material to replace the cement used to prepare foam concrete. In this study, foam concrete was prepared through chemical foaming. The influence of the foaming agent material, foam stabiliser, and fly ash on the basic properties of the foam concrete, including the dry bulk density, compressive strength, and thermal conductivity, was studied, and the pore structure was characterised. The results show that with an increase in the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) content, the dry bulk density, compressive strength, and thermal conductivity of foam concrete decreases, whereas the pore diameter increases (0.495 to 0.746 mm). When the calcium stearate content is within 1.8%, the pore size tends to increase (0.547 to 0.631 mm). With increase in the fly ash content, the strength of foam concrete gradually decreases, and the dry bulk density first decreases and then increases. When the blending ratio of fly ash is 10-40%, the thermal conductivity gradually decreases; an extreme thermal conductivity of 0.0824 W/(mK) appears at the blending ratio of 40%, and the dry bulk density is 336 kg/m(3).

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