Cleaner Engineering and Technology (Feb 2025)

Investigating the synergistic impact of freeze-thaw cycles and deicing salts on the properties of cementitious composites incorporating natural fibers and fly ash

  • Ildiko Merta,
  • Vesna Zalar Serjun,
  • Alenka Mauko Pranjić,
  • Aljoša Šajna,
  • Mateja Štefančič,
  • Bojan Poletanović,
  • Farshad Ameri,
  • Ana Mladenović

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24
p. 100853

Abstract

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In cold climates, concrete structures confront durability challenges due to harsh conditions. This study evaluates the effects of incorporating natural fibers, such as hemp and flax fibers (at 1 vol%), and partially replacing cement with fly ash (at 25 and 50 wt%) on the properties of cementitious composites subjected to accelerated aging under freeze-thaw cycles and deicing salts.Findings reveal that natural fibers enhance the freeze-thaw resistance, reducing deterioration (scaling) to 5–8% after 56 cycles. When mortars were subjected to accelerated freeze-thaw cycles, the compressive strength of plain mortar significantly decreased (up to 57%). However, adding natural fibers to the matrix substantially reduced its compressive strength loss. In the case of flexural strength, plain mortars experienced 33% loss, while hemp, flax, and polypropylene fiber mortars showed only 13%, 23%, and 10% losses, respectively. Furthermore, mortars experience a notable enhancement in their energy absorption capacity when reinforced with natural fibers, particularly with hemp fibers (up to 348% higher than plain mortar).Under harsh conditions, hemp and flax-reinforced mortars, with 25 wt% fly ash replacement, lose the compressive strength significantly however still demonstrate an alternative to synthetic fibers in terms of flexural strength. Even with 25 wt% of fly ash, mortars with natural fiber reinforcement display significantly superior energy absorption capacities compared to plain mortars (up to 48%).

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