Recycling and reuse of solid wastes; a hub for ecofriendly, ecoefficient and sustainable soil, concrete, wastewater and pavement reengineering
Author(s) -
Kennedy C. Onyelowe,
Duc Bui Van,
Obiekwe A. Ubachukwu,
Charles Ezugwu,
A. Bunyamin Salahudeen,
Manh Nguyen Van,
Chijioke Christopher Ikeagwuani,
Talal Amhadi,
Felix Sosa,
Wei Wu,
Thinh Ta Duc,
Adrian O. Eberemu,
Duc Tho Pham,
Obinna Onyebuchi Barah,
Chidozie Ikpa,
Francis Orji,
George Uwadiegwu Alaneme,
Ezenwa Amanamba,
Henry Ugwuanyi,
Vaddi Sesha Sai,
Chukwuma H. Kadurumba,
S. Selvakumar,
Benjamin Ugorji
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of low-carbon technologies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.458
H-Index - 26
eISSN - 1748-1325
pISSN - 1748-1317
DOI - 10.1093/ijlct/ctz028
Subject(s) - reuse , waste management , municipal solid waste , portland cement , environmental science , engineering , work (physics) , cement , materials science , mechanical engineering , metallurgy
Ecofriendly, ecoefficient and sustainable civil engineering work has been research with emphasis on adapting the byproducts of solid waste recycling and reuse to achieving infrastructural activities with low or zero carbon emission. The direction combustion model, the solid waste incinerator caustic soda oxides of carbon entrapment model (SWI-NaOH-OCEM) developed by this research has achieved a zero carbon release. This research adopted the literature search method to put together research results of previous works relevant to the aim of this present work. It has been shown that CO and CO2 emissions can be contained during the derivation of alternative or supplementary cementing materials used in the replacement of ordinary Portland cement in civil engineering works. In the overall assessment of the present review work has left the environment free of the hazards of CO and CO2 emissions. It was shown that these supplementary cementing materials derived from solid wastes improve the engineering properties of treated soft clay and expansive soils, concrete, and asphalt. Bio-peels, another form solid waste has been established as a good detoxificant used in treating wastewater. It has been shown that solid waste recycling and reuse is a hub to achieving ecofriendly, ecoefficient and sustainable infrastructural development on the global scale.
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