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Mortar properties encompass a range of characteristics crucial for construction and masonry work, including workability, water retention, bond strength, durability, compressive strength, volume change, and appearance. Workability refers to mortar's ability to be easily applied and manipulated without sagging or falling off surfaces, which is important for efficient masonry unit placement and alignment. Water retention is essential to prevent the mortar from losing moisture too quickly to...
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Mortar, a mixture of Portland cement, hydrated lime, sand, and water, is a crucial binding material in construction. Its primary function is to join masonry units together, filling gaps and ensuring a uniform distribution of weight across the structure. This helps in preventing potential weaknesses. Mortar also serves as a protective barrier against environmental elements such as water and wind, thereby safeguarding the interior of the structure. It also compensates for surface irregularities...
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Additives and fillers are integral to enhancing the properties of concrete. Pozzolans and blast-furnace slag are additives or admixtures due to their reactions with calcium hydroxide released during cement hydration. Fillers, which are finely ground and similar in fineness to Portland cement, improve concrete attributes such as workability density, and reduce capillary bleeding or cracking. Some fillers possess hydraulic properties or participate in benign reactions within the cement paste.
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Strength of Cement01:20

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Strength tests for cement are not performed directly on neat cement paste due to difficulty in obtaining consistent, reliable specimens. Instead, cement is typically tested in the form of cement-sand mortar.
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Soundness of Cement01:17

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The soundness of cement refers to the ability of cement paste to retain its volume after setting. Unsound cement can lead to expansion and structural damage due to the presence of free lime, magnesia, and calcium sulfate. Free lime hydrates very slowly, expanding and causing unsoundness, which is difficult to detect because it intercrystallizes with other compounds. Magnesia also reacts with water, forming crystals that can disrupt the cement's structure. Calcium sulfate can create...
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The porosity of concrete is a measure of the void spaces within its structure. These spaces impact its strength and durability significantly. When water and cement interact, a chemical reaction called hydration creates a semi-solid paste. This paste includes combined water, making up approximately 23% of the cement's dry mass, and gel water, which fills minuscule voids known as gel pores, accounting for about 28% of the cement gel volume.
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  1. Home
  2. Lavender And Black Pine Waste As Additives Enhancing Selected Mechanical And Hygrothermal Properties Of Cement Mortars.
  1. Home
  2. Lavender And Black Pine Waste As Additives Enhancing Selected Mechanical And Hygrothermal Properties Of Cement Mortars.

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Lavender and Black Pine Waste as Additives Enhancing Selected Mechanical and Hygrothermal Properties of Cement

Jarosław Strzałkowski1, Petrini Kampragkou2, Maria Stefanidou2

  • 1Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering, West Pomeranian University of Technology in Szczecin, Piastów Ave. 50A, 70-311 Szczecin, Poland.

Materials (Basel, Switzerland)
|November 27, 2024

View abstract on PubMed

Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Cement mortars with lavender and pine wood bio-powders show reduced strength but improved hygrothermal performance. These eco-friendly additives enhance bactericidal properties and lower thermal conductivity and water absorption.

Keywords:
bio-powdersblack pine powdercement mortarshydrothermal properties of mortarslavender powdermechanical properties of mortars

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Area of Science:

  • Materials Science
  • Sustainable Construction Materials
  • Bio-based Composites

Background:

  • Growing demand for sustainable construction materials.
  • Need for effective utilization of agricultural and forestry waste.
  • Potential of bio-additives to modify cement mortar properties.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the mechanical and hygrothermal properties of cement mortars incorporating lavender and black pine wood bio-powders.
  • To assess the impact of varying bio-powder content (1.5% and 2.5%) on mortar performance.
  • To evaluate the potential of these bio-additives as sustainable modifiers for cementitious materials.

Main Methods:

  • Preparation of cement mortars with specified percentages of ground lavender and black pine wood bio-powders.
  • Mechanical testing: compressive strength, flexural strength, elastic modulus.
  • Hygrothermal property assessment: water absorption, capillary rise, sorption/desorption, thermal conductivity.
  • Microstructural analysis: mercury intrusion porosimetry (MIP), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS).
  • Main Results:

    • Mortars exhibited strong bactericidal properties.
    • Reduced sorption properties at high humidity and significantly decreased capillary action.
    • Lower thermal conductivity compared to control mortars.
    • Compressive strength decreased by 22-27%, while flexural strength remained largely unaffected.
    • Microstructural analysis revealed changes in pore structure and composition.

    Conclusions:

    • Lavender and black pine wood bio-powders can be effectively used as additives in cement mortars.
    • These bio-additives improve hygrothermal performance, including reduced water absorption and thermal conductivity.
    • While compressive strength is reduced, flexural strength is maintained, and capillary action is significantly mitigated.
    • The use of these bio-waste materials offers a sustainable approach to modifying cement mortar properties.