Energy consumption of a laboratory jaw crusher during normal and high strength concrete recycling

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

M. Nedeljković (Rijkswaterstaat, TU Delft - Materials and Environment)

A.A. Kamat (TU Delft - Heritage & Architecture)

Patrick Holthuizen (TU Delft - Materials and Environment)

Nikola Tošić (Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya)

Erik Schlangen (TU Delft - Materials and Environment)

Sonja Fennis (Rijkswaterstaat)

Research Group
Materials and Environment
Copyright
© 2023 Marija Nedeljković, Ameya Kamat, Patrick Holthuizen, Nikola Tošić, E. Schlangen, Sonja Fennis
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mineng.2023.108421
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 Marija Nedeljković, Ameya Kamat, Patrick Holthuizen, Nikola Tošić, E. Schlangen, Sonja Fennis
Research Group
Materials and Environment
Volume number
204
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Abstract

This paper presents the measurement and analysis of energy consumption of a laboratory jaw crusher during concrete recycling. A method was developed to estimate the power requirements of a lab-scale jaw crusher. The impact of material properties on the crusher performance is studied. Eight concrete strength classes (C20/25–C80/95) were considered in the approach. Concrete specimens were cured for 28 days; at which time, concrete properties were obtained through tests such as bulk density, compressive strength, tensile strength, rebound number and ultrasonic pulse velocity. The impact of different aperture size (5 mm and 25 mm) on the energy consumption was also studied. From the experimental results, it is demonstrated that there is a strong dependance of energy consumption on the compressive strength of concrete. Energy of crushing for specimens with a 90 MPa compressive strength was four times higher than the energy needed to crush specimens with a 28 MPa compressive strength. Furthermore, the crushing requires three times more energy when the smaller aperture size is used to process concrete specimens. The results of this study can form a basis for a future large-scale field analysis and a detailed determination of the energy and economic efficiency of concrete recycling.