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Chapter 5 Characterization of supplementary cementitious materials: Brown coal fly ashes

  • Stefan Stöber and Herbert Pöllmann
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Industrial Waste
This chapter is in the book Industrial Waste

Abstract

Lignite fly ash (LFA) is a waste product of the combustion of lignite, which is produced in large quantities (million tons) worldwide. Lignite fly ash is a heterogeneous mixture of partly round, partly irregularly round glass spheres, surrounding rock particles, the non-combustible, inorganic components of coal and unburned coal residues. Their chemical-mineralogical composition depends essentially on the initial composition of the raw lignite and the firing system used during combustion. On the basis of their chemism, LFAs rich in SiO2, Al2O3, iron, lime and sulphate can be distinguished. The power plant ashes may have hydraulic or pozzolanic properties which can be used for building material applications. In order to guarantee the use of LFA e.g. in concrete, different characterization and testing methods have to be applied in order to evaluate the different properties of LFA, which are described in this article.

Abstract

Lignite fly ash (LFA) is a waste product of the combustion of lignite, which is produced in large quantities (million tons) worldwide. Lignite fly ash is a heterogeneous mixture of partly round, partly irregularly round glass spheres, surrounding rock particles, the non-combustible, inorganic components of coal and unburned coal residues. Their chemical-mineralogical composition depends essentially on the initial composition of the raw lignite and the firing system used during combustion. On the basis of their chemism, LFAs rich in SiO2, Al2O3, iron, lime and sulphate can be distinguished. The power plant ashes may have hydraulic or pozzolanic properties which can be used for building material applications. In order to guarantee the use of LFA e.g. in concrete, different characterization and testing methods have to be applied in order to evaluate the different properties of LFA, which are described in this article.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. List of Authors IX
  4. Part 1: Measurement and properties
  5. Chapter 1 Characterization of supplementary cementitious materials and their quantification in cement blends by solid-state NMR 3
  6. Chapter 2 Mineralogical quantification of cements, wastes and supplementary cementitious materials 33
  7. Chapter 3 Microstructure analysis with quantitative phase mapping using SEM-EDS and Phase Recognition and Characterization (PARC) Software: applied to steelmaking slag 57
  8. Chapter 4 The use of μXRF in the characterization of industrial wastes and pozzolanes 97
  9. Part 2: Characterization of industrial residues
  10. Chapter 5 Characterization of supplementary cementitious materials: Brown coal fly ashes 165
  11. Chapter 6 Iron and steel slags: from wastes to by-products of high technical, economical and ecological advantages 203
  12. Chapter 7 Utilization of Supplementary cementitious materials (SCM) in Portland cement, alkali activated and ternary binders 253
  13. Chapter 8 Study of some physico chemical properties of plastic clays belonging to Girujan deposits from Chumoukedima Nagaland, India and their prospective industrial applications 297
  14. Part 3: Use and application of industrial residues
  15. Chapter 9 Conversion of CO2 into useful products 319
  16. Chapter 10 Mine tailings as precursors for alkali-activated materials and ettringite binders 345
  17. Chapter 11 Industrial waste as fuel and raw material in the cement industry 361
  18. Chapter 12 Fly ash from municipal solid waste Incineration: from industrial residue to resource for zinc 379
  19. Chapter 13 Residues of industrial wastewater treatment: Hazardous waste or anthropogenic resource? 403
  20. Chapter 14 Composites of some sustainable siliceous materials for the removal of fluoride from ground water and immobilization of the sludge generated 433
  21. Part 4: Residues from mining
  22. Chapter 15 Characterization and mineral processing options of “Kupferschiefer”-type low-grade black shale ore from mining dumps in Central Germany 455
  23. Chapter 16 Rare-earth elements in phosphogypsum and mineral processing residues from phosphate-rich weathered alkaline ultramafic rocks, Brazil 505
  24. Chapter 17 The Mn oxides tailing from Amazon Region as low-cost raw material to synthesis of shigaite-type phase 541
  25. Chapter 18 Eco-cements out of Belterra Clay: An extensive Brazilian bauxite overburden to produce low-CO2 eco-friendly calcium sulphoaluminate based cements 553
  26. Index 581
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