Concrete substitute brings advantages
It does this while using three times as much fly ash, thus tripling the amount of the pollutant that is converted from waste into useful material.
New era for sustainable development
“Once the technique is applied in industrial practice, it will substantially substitute concrete in the construction industry,” Inventor Jinhong Zhang, associate professor of mining and geological engineering in the University of Arizona's College of Engineering, says. “It will save the impoundment space for fly ash and reduce CO2 emission during the production of cement. It will be a novel construction material for the new era for a sustainable development.”
Startup introduces cement alternative
Tech Launch Arizona, the office of the UA that commercialises inventions stemming from research, brought together Zhang and entrepreneur Abraham Jalbout to create the startup company to develop the product and bring it to market. The new company goes by the name of Acrete, a combination of “Arizona” and “concrete.” While fly ash serves as an additive in the production of Portland cement-based concrete products, it tends to make up only about 30 percent of the solid material. Alternatively, fly ash provides nearly 100 percent of the solids in Acrete for the end product without the addition of cement.
Triple compressive strength of cement
“Acrete can have as much as three times the compressive strength of cement and twice the flexural strength,” says Tech Launch Arizona licensing manager Bob Sleeper. “It repels water, and we can control the workability by tweaking the recipe.”
“Our vision is to look at how we can reutilise waste and underutilised materials that are being produced as byproducts of mining,” says Jalbout, Acrete's CEO. “We want to find ways to use these materials for other applications.” Jalbout and Sleeper have an ongoing relationship and plan to grow the Acrete portfolio with more inventions. “We're looking to add technologies,” Jalbout says, “which will eventually include uses for mine tailings and solutions for mine insulation.”
Why is finding uses for fly ash so important?
Coal-fired power plants in the United States produce about 130 million tons of fly ash each year. Much of that fly ash is disposed of in mounds where wind and water erosion can disperse it. In industry, fly ash is generally stored at coal power plants or placed in landfills. Impounding fly ash occupies large areas of land and leads to high monetary, environmental and ecological costs. “With Acrete, we're bringing to market a way to transform dangerous waste into a useful building material, binding it up, and removing it from the environment where it can cause problems,” Sleeper says. “That's a good thing.”