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<title>DETERMINATION OF FRACTURE PARAMETERS OF HIGH STRENGTH CONCRETE DERIVED FROM RICE HUSK ASH CEMENT BLENDS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2166</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-04T18:37:13Z</dc:date>
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<title>DETERMINATION OF FRACTURE PARAMETERS OF HIGH STRENGTH CONCRETE DERIVED FROM RICE HUSK ASH CEMENT BLENDS</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2167</link>
<description>DETERMINATION OF FRACTURE PARAMETERS OF HIGH STRENGTH CONCRETE DERIVED FROM RICE HUSK ASH CEMENT BLENDS
BUCKNOR, Anthony Olusegun
Concrete, a conventional building material is prone to fracture crack propagation, due to&#13;
temperature and shrinkage stresses development, resulting in strength loss. Efforts in&#13;
recent times have been directed at improving the resistance of concrete to crack&#13;
propagation using pozzolanic materials such as Rice Husk Ash (RHA). However,&#13;
information on fracture characteristics of High Strength RHA blended High Strength&#13;
Concrete (HSC) are limited. This study was designed to investigate fracture&#13;
characteristics of modified RHA-HSC using Crack Tip Opening Displacement (CTODc)&#13;
and Stress intensity factor (KSIC).&#13;
Rice husk obtained from Ire-Ekiti was calcined for six hours at 700°C in a closed furnace&#13;
and cooled over a 48-hour period. The RHA produced was milled to 5 µm, and the&#13;
chemical and microstructural properties were determined using ASTM C 618 and Xray&#13;
Diffraction (XRD), respectively. The BRE/DoE mix design method was used to&#13;
determine the concrete mix for targeted compressive strength of 60 MPa. Portland&#13;
limestone cement was replaced with RHA at 0, 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50% by weight of&#13;
cement. Seventy-six (milled and unmilled each) 150 mm RHA-HSC cubes were cast&#13;
and tested for compressive strength at 7, 14, 21 and 28 days. Based on the preliminary&#13;
results 78 beams of milled (0, 10 and 20%) RHA-HSC blends were prepared to obtain&#13;
CTODc and KSIC using Reunion Internationale des Laboratoires et Experts des&#13;
Materiaux method. The CTODc and KSIC for 60 MPa were modelled using numerical&#13;
analysis, while Scikit-learn statistical method was used to model varying RHA-HSC&#13;
blends. Adequacy of the model was determined using coefficient of Regression (R2).&#13;
The RHA comprised of SiO2 (87.3%), Al2O3 (3.1%), and Fe2O3 (1.1%). This satisfied&#13;
the ASTM C 618 70% minimum requirement for oxides. The observed pattern of peak&#13;
broadening, smaller grain size and distinct peaks in RHA-HSC blends, implied the&#13;
presence of a periodic crystal lattice structure. The compressive strengths of milled and&#13;
unmilled RHA concrete blends ranged from 54.5 to 60.2 MPa and 11.3 to 44 MPa,&#13;
respectively. This implied that RHA concrete did not meet the targeted compressive&#13;
strength of 60 MPa. The corresponding CTODc at 10% and 20% RHA concrete cement&#13;
blends were 0.02 and 0.32 mm, respectively while that of KSIC were 1.32 and 1.42&#13;
MPa√m, respectively. The corresponding CTODc of 10% milled RHA-HSC increased&#13;
by 20% crack width, while the 20% milled RHA-HSC increased by 58.5%, when&#13;
compared with the control mix. The KSIC of 10% RHA-HSC samples yielded 7.9%&#13;
increase, while the 20% RHA-HSC concrete yielded a 16.2% increase, when compared&#13;
with the control mix. The CTODc and KSIC from varying RHA-HSC blend fracture&#13;
models yielded 0.02 and 1.24, respectively, and compared favourably with experimental&#13;
data (R2=0.873).&#13;
The incorporation of rice husk ash enhanced the fracture resistance characteristics of&#13;
blended high strength concrete. The adopted model is suitable for predicting the&#13;
potential failure of high strength concrete derived from rice husk ash cement blends.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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