Technical feasibility of incorporating crushed sand as a partial replacement for natural sand in self-compacting concrete
Keywords:
Self-compacting, Cohesion, Homogeneity, Residue, SustainabilityAbstract
Self-compacting concrete (SCC) is considered a special concrete, derived from conventional concrete (CCV). It has the ability to flow and self-condense due to its own weight, being able to fill shapes and pass through sausages, maintaining its homogeneity during all phases of preparation, transport, launching and finishing. Its advantages include the reduction of labor during concreting, the ability to fill slender structures and the elimination of vibration noise, allowing work at night and close to sensitive areas, such as schools. However, the process of extracting natural sand (AN) is expensive, both economically and environmentally, and is a concern today. This study evaluated the partial replacement of natural sand with crushed sand, a residue from the processing of granite rocks, in the production of self-compacting concrete, aiming to reduce costs and use industrial waste. The results showed that mixtures with crushed sand maintained adequate concrete performance in the fresh and hardened states, meeting the requirements of technical standards related to self-compacting concrete, indicating a viable and sustainable alternative for the production of SCC.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Electronic Journal of Exact and Technological Sciences

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
RECET publications are licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).
With this license, it is allowed to access, download (download), copy, print, share, reuse and distribute the articles as long as for non-commercial purposes and with the citation of the source, giving due credits of authorship and mention to the RECET Magazine.
By submitting articles to the RECET Magazine, the authors agree to make their texts legally available under this license. Commercial uses of material published in the magazine will only be allowed after written authorization from the magazine.