Production of Sintered Fine Sediment Lightweight Aggregate

2008 
This paper investigates the production process and mechanical properties of lightweight aggregates made from fine sediments collected from the Shih-Men Reservoir in Taiwan. Approximately 95% of the reservoir’s fine sediment particles pass through a No.200 sieve. This sediment is composed of 61% of SiO2, 18% Al2O3, and 6.5% Fe2O3. In this study, the fine sediments were granulated and heated to the fusion point of about 1100℃ to 1200℃ in a high temperature oven. After heated, the grains became soft grew 10% to 60% larger than their original volume. In these experiments, the lightweight aggregates were sintered into a single nominal particle size (11 mm) and 3 specific weight ranges (0.8~1.0, 1.0~1.2, 1.2~1.4). The test results show that using ultra-fine sediments as the raw material is advantageous in forming surface-glassed lightweight aggregates with reduced water absorption capacity and higher compressive strength. The water absorption adsorption capacity of the lightweight aggregates varied from 9% to 13%. The particle strength was between 7 MPa and 17 MPa.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    1
    References
    2
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []