Upscaling the pollutant emission from mixed recycled aggregates under compaction for civil applications
Author
Pérez Galvín, Adela
Ayuso Muñoz, Jesús
Barbudo Muñoz, M. Auxiliadora
Cabrera, Manuel
López Uceda, Antonio
Rosales, Julia
Publisher
SpringerDate
2017Subject
Sustainable constructionLeaching tests
Construction and demolition waste
Recycled aggregates
On-site conditions
Civil engineering
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In general terms, plant managers of sites producing construction wastes assess materials according to concise, legally recommended leaching tests that do not consider the compaction stage of the materials when they are applied on-site. Thus, the tests do
not account for the real on-site physical conditions of the recycled aggregates used in civil works (e.g., roads or embankments).
This leads to errors in estimating the pollutant potential of these materials. For that reason, in the present research, an experimental procedure is designed as a leaching test for construction materials under compaction. The aim of this laboratory test
(designed specifically for the granular materials used in civil engineering infrastructures) is to evaluate the release of pollutant
elements when the recycled aggregate is tested at its commercial grain-size distribution and when the material is compacted under
on-site conditions. Two recycled aggregates with different gypsum contents (0.95 and 2.57%) were used in this study. In addition
to the designed leaching laboratory test, the conventional compliance leaching test and the Dutch percolation test were performed. The results of the new leaching method were compared with the conventional leaching test results. After analysis, the
chromium and sulphate levels obtained from the newly designed test were lower than those obtained from the conventional
leaching test, and these were considered more seriously pollutant elements. This result confirms that when the leaching behaviour
is evaluated for construction aggregates without density alteration, crushing the aggregate and using only the finest fraction, as is
done in the conventional test (which is an unrealistic situation for aggregates that are applied under on-site conditions), the
leaching behaviour is not accurately assessed.