Researchers find coffee boost to make stronger concrete

The technique, developed by RMIT University’s Dr Ra­jeev Roychand, involves turning waste coffee grounds into biochar, resulting in a 30% increase in concrete strength.

 

Engineers in Australia have discovered a way to make stronger con­crete using roasted leftover coffee grounds, giving the drink additive a “second chance” and reducing waste going to landfills.

 

Lead author Dr Rajeev Roy­chand from RMIT University said the team developed a technique to make concrete 30 per cent stronger by turning waste cof­fee grounds into biochar, using a low-energy process without oxy­gen at 350 degrees Celsius.

 

Organic waste

“The disposal of organic waste poses an environmen­tal challenge as it emits large amounts of greenhouse gases including methane and carbon dioxide, which contribute to cli­mate change,” said Roychand, from the School of Engineering.

 

Australia generates 75 mil­lion kilograms of ground coffee waste every year – most of it goes

 

to landfills. Globally, 10 billion kilo­grams of spent coffee is generated annually.

 

Published in the Journal of Cleaner Production, the study by RMIT engineers is the first to prove that waste coffee grounds can be used to improve concrete.

 

“The inspiration for our work was to find an innovative way of using the large amounts of coffee waste in construction projects rather than going to landfills – to give coffee a ‘double shot’ at life,” said Roychand, a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at RMIT.

 

“Several councils that are battling with the disposal of or­ganic waste have shown interest in our work.

“They have already engaged us for their upcoming infrastruc­ture projects incorporating pyro­lysed forms of different organic wastes.”

 

Pyrolysis involves heating organic waste in the absence of oxygen.

 

The construction industry

Joint lead author, Dr Shannon Kilmartin-Lynch, a Vice-Chan­cellor’s Indigenous Postdoctoral Research Fellow at RMIT, said construction industries around the world could play a role in transforming this waste into a valuable resource.

 

“Inspiration for my research, from an Indigenous perspective, involves Caring for Country, en­suring there’s a sustainable life cycle for all materials and avoid­ing things going into landfill to minimise the impact on the envi­ronment,” said Kilmartin-Lynch from RMIT’s School of Engineer­ing.

 

“The concrete industry has the potential to contribute signifi­cantly to increasing the recycling of organic waste such as used coffee.

 

“Our research is in the early stages, but these exciting findings offer an innovative way to great­ly reduce the amount of organic waste that goes to landfill.”

 

Preserving resource

Corresponding author and research team leader Professor Jie Li said the coffee biochar can replace a portion of the sand that was used to make concrete.

 

“The ongoing extraction of natural sand around the world – typically taken from river beds and banks – to meet the rapidly growing demands of the construc­tion industry has a big impact on the environment,” Li said.

 

50 billion tonnes of natural sand are used in construction projects globally every year.

 

“There are critical and long-lasting challenges in main­taining a sustainable supply of sand due to the finite nature of resources and the environmental impacts of sand mining,” Li said.

 

“With a circular-economy approach, we could keep organ­ic waste out of landfill and also better preserve our natural re­sources like sand.”

 

SOURCE: ANI