Relevant Biochar Characteristics Influencing Compressive Strength of Biochar-Cement Mortars: Article No. 87

Julia Hylton, Aaron Hugen, Steven Rowland, Michael Griffin, Lori Tunstall

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus Citations

Abstract

To counteract the contribution of CO2 emissions by cement production and utilization, biochar is being harnessed as a carbon-negative additive in concrete. Increasing the cement replacement and biochar dosage will increase the carbon offset, but there is large variability in methods being used and many researchers report strength decreases at cement replacements beyond 5%. This work presents a reliable method to replace 10% of the cement mass with a vast selection of biochars without decreasing ultimate compressive strength, and in many cases significantly improving it. By carefully quantifying the physical and chemical properties of each biochar used, machine learning algorithms were used to elucidate the three most influential biochar characteristics that control mortar strength: initial saturation percentage, oxygen-to-carbon ratio, and soluble silicon. These results provide additional research avenues for utilizing several potential biomass waste streams to increase the biochar dosage in cement mixes without decreasing mechanical properties.
Original languageAmerican English
Number of pages27
JournalBiochar
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024

NREL Publication Number

  • NREL/JA-5100-91833

Keywords

  • biochar
  • compressive strength
  • concrete
  • multivariate linear model
  • predictor variables

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