Displaying items by tag: Qatar
Qatar to use steel slag in road construction
13 April 2017Qatar: The Ministry of Municipality and Environment (MME), the British Transport Research Institute (TRL), Qatar Steel and Ashghal have been running a pilot project to use steel slag in the construction sector including to build roads. The test is part of the country’s infrastructure development in the lead up to the 2022 FIFA World Cup, according to the Gulf Times. Qatar Steel has accumulated large quantities of steel slag from its plant in Mesaieed. It produces over 350,000t/yr and has a stockpile of over 1.6Mt.
Slag road construction trials were conducted at a Qatar Steel site in 2016. The TRL has since recommended production of slag aggregate, certification of slag products by the authorities including MME and Ashghal, development of case studies and the inclusion in the next update to the Qatar construction specification.
Qatar: At Qatar University a project is being undertaken to make more cost-effective and environmentally-friendly concrete structures. Initiated under the auspices of the Centre for Advanced Materials (CAM), the project aims to partially replace cement with aluminium slags that are currently discarded in landfills.
The project team is led by Nesibe Gozde Ozerkan, assistant professor and assistant researcher at CAM. Omar al-Azzawi, a Masters student in the project team, claimed that using the mix design specified in the research will reduce the concrete final setting time by 48%. It will also, Omar said, reduce the corrosion of the reinforcement steel by more than 50%, which will positively affect the durability of structures.
Because of the expanding properties of aluminium slag, the mixture can be used in building subfloors, blocks and pre-moulded panels. Applying the idea will reduce the cost of concrete, the time needed for it to be cured, pollution caused by cement production and the pollution that results from throwing the dross into the landfill, according to al-Azzawi.
Ozerkan said the project is highly relevant to the realisation of the objectives of Qatar National Vision 2030, since locally-produced aluminium waste, which has very detrimental effect on the environment, was used in the project. As a result, it can be said that the usage of the dross in concrete decreases its detrimental environmental effect. Moreover, the dross has some beneficial effect on concrete properties, providing benefits for local industry.