Physical and mechanical characterization of cement-stabilized compressed earth bricks

Abstract: Soil is the basic material for the manufacture of compressed earth bricks, which is worked without any type of stabilization to obtain the minimum physical and mechanical properties required according to Peruvian standard E.070. The objective of this research is to evaluate the physical and mechanical characteristics of compressed earth bricks stabilized with different dosages of 5, 8, 12, 12, 15 and 18% of cement in dry weight of soil. The tests performed were: absorption, compressive strength, flexural strength per unit of masonry, compressive strength in piles, diagonal compressive strength of walls and the X-ray diffraction test. The results obtained show that with 18% of cement the optimum resistance is obtained, in terms of compressive strength increased by 53.95%, flexural strength by 43%, pile compressive strength by 36.6%, and wall diagonal compressive strength by 41.24%, respectively. The X-ray diffraction test applied to the optimum stabilized compressed earth brick sample shows that its composition is dominated by certain components such as 32.4% calcium silicate, 23.8% aluminum silicate, 17.4% hydrated calcium, 14.2% illite, 6.86% calcium oxide, 3.34% quartz, 1.2% kaolinite and 0.8% goethite. It is concluded that cement-stabilized compressed earth bricks (LTCEC) are a sustainable construction alternative that improves the mechanical properties of earth bricks.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Muñoz,Sócrates, Rojas,Miriam, Villena,Luigi, Tepe,Victor, Garcia,Juan, Alvarez,Jorge
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Departamento de Ingeniería y Gestión de la Construcción 2024
Online Access:http://www.scielo.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0718-50732024000100085
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Summary:Abstract: Soil is the basic material for the manufacture of compressed earth bricks, which is worked without any type of stabilization to obtain the minimum physical and mechanical properties required according to Peruvian standard E.070. The objective of this research is to evaluate the physical and mechanical characteristics of compressed earth bricks stabilized with different dosages of 5, 8, 12, 12, 15 and 18% of cement in dry weight of soil. The tests performed were: absorption, compressive strength, flexural strength per unit of masonry, compressive strength in piles, diagonal compressive strength of walls and the X-ray diffraction test. The results obtained show that with 18% of cement the optimum resistance is obtained, in terms of compressive strength increased by 53.95%, flexural strength by 43%, pile compressive strength by 36.6%, and wall diagonal compressive strength by 41.24%, respectively. The X-ray diffraction test applied to the optimum stabilized compressed earth brick sample shows that its composition is dominated by certain components such as 32.4% calcium silicate, 23.8% aluminum silicate, 17.4% hydrated calcium, 14.2% illite, 6.86% calcium oxide, 3.34% quartz, 1.2% kaolinite and 0.8% goethite. It is concluded that cement-stabilized compressed earth bricks (LTCEC) are a sustainable construction alternative that improves the mechanical properties of earth bricks.