An Australian company is harvesting blast furnace waste and converting it into a new product to make cement in China, where 60% of the world’s iron waste is found.
Topics
Halifax Startup Recycles Carbon Dioxide for Greener Concrete Products
CarbonCure Technologies, a Halifax-based startup that has developed the technology to recycle carbon dioxide gas back into solid concrete.
Smart Cement Revolutionizes Well Casings
A researcher is trying to give cement sensing properties with applications in the oil industry.
New Formula for High-Strength Shotcrete to Protect Tunnels from Fires and Terrorist Attacks
The science magazine Rubin reports that engineers at Germany’s Ruhr-Universität Bochum have developed a shotcrete that can render tunnels, bridges and other structures more resistant against fires and explosions.
Using Muons from Cosmic Rays to Find Degrading Concrete
A new report from Phys.org explains how subatomic particles known as muons are being used to probe the structure of concrete. This is a useful ability because building materials such as pipes and concrete that are part of our energy infrastructure corrode and wear thin or degrade over time. Scientists were seeking a better way to be warned of infrastructure deterioration before it becomes a problem and found that these particles work.
Geopolymer Concrete Shows Extreme Fire-Proof Qualities
Concrete made using an industrial by-product has shown better fire endurance than traditional concrete when exposed to fires of nearly 1000 degrees Celsius.
Materials Scientists Make Martian Concrete
A research team has created a form of concrete that, remarkably, can be made without water and using materials that are widely available on Mars.
Researchers File Patent for Fire-resistant Concrete
Scientists at the Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology (EMPA) have added polypropylene (PP) fiber to a concrete mix. The technique allows water vapor to escape, preventing pressure from building inside the concrete, making it more fire-proof.
Concrete’s Structure is Now Known
The website Phys.org revealed new research into whether the structure that forms when water, gravel, sand and cement powder are combined is a continuous solid, like metal or stone, or an aggregate of small particles.