The methodology was demonstrated at the India One Solar Thermal Power plant in Rajasthan and is expected to save 250 kWh of electricity per tonne of concrete waste.
Arpita Das | January 16, 2023 | 02:02 PM IST
NEW DELHI: The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Madras researchers have developed a treatment process involving solar thermal energy to recycle construction and demolition debris. The demonstration was done at the ‘India One Solar Thermal Power Plant,’ located in ‘Shantivan,’ the headquarters of the Brahma Kumaris organization in Rajasthan.
It has 770 solar concentrators to produce electricity using steam generated at high pressure. The waste concrete from demolition was heated using solar radiation to produce recycled concrete aggregate (RCA) that was higher in quality when compared to those obtained from mechanical crushing. The concrete made using this technology met the requirements for typical structural applications. The plant has been operational since 2017 and provides power to a community of about 25,000 people at a reasonable cost and low maintenance.
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"By using concentrated solar energy for the heating, the thermo-mechanical beneficiation of the concrete waste results in high-quality recyclable materials, which can substitute stone (blue metal) aggregates and sand in concrete. In this pioneering study, concrete from a demolition site was heated using solar radiation concentrated through large reflectors and cast iron receivers to more than 550 °C and subsequently scrubbed mechanically to yield coarse and fine RCA, with properties similar to those of pristine aggregates", the official IIT Palakkad release stated.
Elaborating on the study, Professor Ravindra Gettu, VS Raju Chair Professor, Department of Civil Engineering, IIT Madras, said, “The main intention of the present study was to develop the proof-of-concept that solar radiation could be used in the thermomechanical beneficiation of concrete waste to produce good quality recyclable material for new concrete. This study presents strong evidence for the use of concentrated solar energy for recycling waste concrete, with promise for large-scale waste concrete recycling. This would reduce the energy footprint of Construction and Demolition waste processing significantly, and lead to savings in raw material and electricity, towards circular economy.”
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The objectives addressed in this study is divided into three parts— the use of concentrated solar energy in the thermomechanical beneficiation of concrete waste, the production of high-quality RCA from the waste and assessing the performance of the RCA in concrete to establish the fact that waste can be recycled.
The main conclusions from the study is as follows:
Concrete is the most common material used in construction universally with an annual production estimated to be 10–30 billion tonnes. The present study attempts to mitigate the limitations of conventional thermomechanical techniques with regard to harmful emissions through the utilization of concentrated solar energy.
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