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Performance Evaluation of Sand-Coated Recycled HDPE and E-Plastic Aggregates as Partial Replacements for Coarse Aggregate in Sustainable Concrete

The MIT Press eBooks 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Alwyn Varghese, Soorya M. Nair, PG. Neeraja, K. Athira, Alphred Varied, M Kavya, K M Aadharsh

Summary

Researchers partially replaced natural coarse aggregate in concrete with sand-coated recycled HDPE and e-waste plastic aggregates, finding that the hybrid plastic waste approach produced concrete with acceptable mechanical and microstructural performance while diverting two problematic waste streams.

Polymers
Body Systems

This study investigates the mechanical and microstructural performance of concrete partially incorporating sand-coated recycled HDPE and e-waste plastic aggregates as substitutes for natural coarse aggregates. The novelty of the work lies in its dual approach—utilizing a hybrid plastic waste stream and applying a sand-coating surface treatment to improve the interfacial bond between the plastic aggregates and cement paste. The study compare the workability, compressive strength, and durability-related characteristics, comparing coated versus uncoated plastic aggregates at various replacement levels of previous study. Results demonstrate that sand-coated plastic aggregates yield improved mechanical performance, achieving up to 12% enhancement in compressive strength and better freeze-thaw and chemical resistance compared to uncoated counterparts. The sand-coating treatment significantly mitigates the challenges of weak bonding and poor stress transfer typically associated with plastic-modified concrete. The study contributes to sustainable construction practices by promoting the reuse of non-biodegradable plastic waste and reducing reliance on natural aggregates. This research provides a scalable and eco-efficient solution aligned with circular economy principles and Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 11 and 12). Further work is recommended to explore long-term durability, field-scale applications, and life cycle assessments to validate large-scale implementation. Introduction

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