Palm Oil Fuel Ash as A Cement Replacement in Concrete

To produce concrete, cement is an essential material that binds together solid bodies but also is the largest producer of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emission. Up to 10% of global CO 2 emission comes from cement production thus making the sustainability of concrete a major issue that needs addressing. The processes of producing concrete consume heavily on natural resources such as sand, gravel, water, coal and crushed rock, mining of which damages the environment. It is however possible, that energy and cost efficiency can be achieved by reducing on the amount of clinker, and in its place utilizing partial cement replacements/pozzolans that require less process heating and emit fewer levels of carbon dioxide. This study investigates the effectiveness of agro waste ash by-product Palm Oil Fuel Ash (POFA) as an alternative material to replace Portland cement (OPC). Experiments were carried out by supplementing CEM I cement by weight in concrete mixes with POFA at 2.5%, 5%, 10%, 15% and 20% steps at the point of need, with water to cement ratio of 0.5. Results were compared with a control specimen, which was made with 100% cement. The results showed impressive compressive strength, especially at early age; in fact POFA specimens containing 2.5% and 5% POFA replacement displayed greater early compressive strength in comparison to the control, which is similar in behaviour to concrete containing silica fume which is an established partial cement replacement used in high strength applications. The results showed good repeatability and highlight the potential of POFA as an effective pozzolan which could enhance the sustainability and economic aspect of concrete.


Introduction
Sustainability has widely emerged in recent years to resist climate change and pollution caused by ineffective waste management. The cement industry, as one of the fundamental materials industries, plays a very important role in the social and economic development as well as imposes a great challenge in terms of its large consumption of natural resources and energy and the emission of greenhouse gases. Cement is one of the main constituents in concrete and is thus one of most utilized commodities in the world [1]. From an environmental perspective, the production of 1 tonne of cement directly generates about 1 tonne of CO 2 [2]. Cement production is therefore responsible for 7-10% of the world's total CO2 emissions; compare this to the aviation industry, which is 2.8%, three times less than the production that comes from cement industry [3][4][5][6][7][8]. As a result, the use of supplementary cementing materials (SCMs), like pulverised fuel ash (PFA) and ground granulated blastfurnace slag (GGBS) have been established over the past 30 years as they not only reduce the embodied CO2 of concrete, the long-term strength and durability is improved. Both PFA and GGBS are waste products from the coal and steel industry; due to the recent decline of both these industries, focus has shifted on other alternative SCMs. One potential alternative from agricultural waste is POFA. POFA is ash obtained by incinerating the by-products of palm oil mill. The tall-stemmed oil palm tree belongs to palm family Palmea and the countries that cultivate oil palm are Benin Republic, Colombia, Ecuador, Nigeria, Zaire, Indonesia and Malaysia of which the last one is the largest producer of palm oil and palm oil products [9]. In Malaysia the total solid waste generated by this industry in about two hundred palm oil mills has been estimated at about ten million tons a year. These by-products are commonly used as fuel in the boiler of palm oil mills and become ash. The ash is a waste material the disposal of which poses enormous environmental pollution because the ash is usually disposed of without any commercial return [7,9,10] in the Far East millions of tonnes of waste is generated annually. It has been suggested [11] POFA may have pozzolanic qualities, however, very little research has been done in this area. This paper investigates the plausibility of POFA as a pozzolanic addition in concrete.

Methods
Palm Oil Fuel Ash was sourced from Malaysia. The cement used was Portland cement-CEM I 52.5R (Snow Crete). Cement was

Abstract
To produce concrete, cement is an essential material that binds together solid bodies but also is the largest producer of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) emission. Up to 10% of global CO 2 emission comes from cement production thus making the sustainability of concrete a major issue that needs addressing. The processes of producing concrete consume heavily on natural resources such as sand, gravel, water, coal and crushed rock, mining of which damages the environment. It is however possible, that energy and cost efficiency can be achieved by reducing on the amount of clinker, and in its place utilizing partial cement replacements/pozzolans that require less process heating and emit fewer levels of carbon dioxide. This study investigates the effectiveness of agro waste ash by-product Palm Oil Fuel Ash (POFA) as an alternative material to replace Portland cement (OPC). Experiments were carried out by supplementing CEM I cement by weight in concrete mixes with POFA at 2.5%, 5%, 10%, 15% and 20% steps at the point of need, with water to cement ratio of 0.5. Results were compared with a control specimen, which was made with 100% cement. The results showed impressive compressive strength, especially at early age; in fact POFA specimens containing 2.5% and 5% POFA replacement displayed greater early compressive strength in comparison to the control, which is similar in behaviour to concrete containing silica fume which is an established partial cement replacement used in high strength applications. The results showed good repeatability and highlight the potential of POFA as an effective pozzolan which could enhance the sustainability and economic aspect of concrete.
replaced with POFA in concrete by volume at steps of 0%, 2.5%, 5%, 10%, 15% and 20%. The 0% replacement, also referred to as the control was taken as the point of reference from which all performance was measured. Water to cement ratio (WCR) of 0.5 was used for the mixes to achieve a good balance of workability and strength in line with Abram's law which states that the strength of concrete mix is determined by the WCR, with lower WCR having higher strengths and vice-versa [12]. The quantities of each mix were measured as detailed in Table 1. Workability was measured using the slump test method, whose apparatus were a slump cone and a tamping rod conforming to BS EN 12350-2:2009 [13]. Cube moulds for compressive measured 100mm x 100mm x 100mm, whereas cylinder moulds for tensile strength testing were 150mm in diameter and 300mm in height, conforming to dimensional guidelines of BS EN 12390-1:2012 [14]. The method used to make cubes conformed to BS EN 12390-2:2009 [15]. Cylinders conformed to BS EN 12390-4:2000 [16]. The specimens were left on the moulds for 24 hours after which they were stripped, marked and submerged in a water tank at temperatures of 20 °C±2 until their age of testing conforming to BS EN 12390-2:2009 [15]. Specimens were cured for up to 28 days. Compressive strength tests were conducted to BS EN 12390-4:2000 [16]. After the application of an initial load of 0.6±0.2N/mm 2 .s, which, according to BS EN 12390-4:2000 [16] does not exceed 30% of the failure load, further constant load was applied at a rate of±10% until no further load could be sustained.
Compressive tests were carried out at 7 and 28 days. Results were taken as an average of the three cubes per test, and expressed in N/mm 2 .Tensile strengths were conducted to BS EN 12390-6:2009 [17]. The testing machine conformed to BS EN 12390-4:2000 [16] while packing strips conformed to BS EN 316:2009 [18]. Initial load was applied at a constant rate of stress of 0.04 N/mm 2 .s, which, according to BS EN 12390-6:2009 [17] does not exceed 20% of the failure load. Further constant load was thereafter applied at a rate of ±10% until no further load could be sustained. As POFA is a very fine low-density material the cement was replaced by weight and at lower percentage, similar dosage to Silica Fume.

Results and Discussion
Compressive strength Compressive strength is the most important property of concrete, and it measures how much load concrete structures can sustain before failing. (Table 2) and (Figure 1)   It can be used in high-strength concrete and could include long span bridges, mainly of precast and prestressed girders to allow for longer span in structural bridge design and high-rise sky scrapers by building smaller columns and increasing usable space. Tensile strength (Table 3) and (Figure 2) show the tensile strength results for POFA concrete at 28 days, the tensile strength initially increases with increasing POFA replacement up to 5% then subsequently decreases at higher levels; this trend is not consistent with the general behavior of PCRs [22][23][24][25][26] whereby the tensile strength decreases with increasing amount of PCRs.  Workability Table 4 and Figure 3 show the slumps of POFA replaced mixes at different replacement levels. One of the basic attributes of any cementitious material is its workability or "consistence", which is largely determined by how wet the concrete is. This is referred to as "slump". Basically, the wetter the concrete, the higher the slump.
Although slump is often seen as an indication of water content, it is more reasonably interpreted as a measure of consistence.   d) Based on strength findings, palm Oil Fuel Ash concrete have the potential to be used in superstructures including long span bridges, mainly for precast and prestressed girders to allow for longer spans in structural bridge design and high-rise sky scrapers by building smaller columns and increasing.