Flow And Mechanical Properties of 3D Printed Cementitious Material With Recycled Glass-Aggregates (2018-05)¶
Annapareddy Ashokreddy, , , ,
Contribution - Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing, pp. 68-73
Abstract
Environmental sustainability has been the focus of recent construction trends. Adopting efficient construction technologies and minimizing the usage of raw materials are a few of many ways to achieve such sustainability. In the past few years, 3D printing of concrete has received considerable attention for its potential to be the next disruptive technology for construction industry. By eliminating and/or reducing the amount of in-situ construction, combined with the need for skilled personnel, 3D printing can help in achieving good quality control at construction site, which has long been an issue in traditional construction industry. Singapore is dependent on neighboring countries for raw construction materials. Using recycled materials as a substitute for aggregates not only minimizes the usage of raw materials, but also help in reducing the Singapore’s dependency on other countries in long-term. In this study, preliminary findings of a 3D printed cementitious material with recycled glass aggregates (RGA) were presented. For 3D printing two different binder systems were used – ternary blended Portland cement and flyash based geopolymer.
¶
3 References
- Panda Biranchi, Paul Suvash, Lim Jian, Tay Yi et al. (2017-08)
Additive Manufacturing of Geopolymer for Sustainable Built Environment - Panda Biranchi, Tan Ming (2018-03)
Experimental Study on Mix Proportion and Fresh Properties of Fly-Ash-Based Geopolymer for 3D Concrete Printing - Weng Yiwei, Li Mingyang, Tan Ming, Qian Shunzhi (2018-01)
Design 3D Printing Cementitious Materials via Fuller-Thompson-Theory and Marson-Percy-Model
6 Citations
- Sičáková Alena, Verčimák Dominik (2025-11)
Lightweight Mixtures with a High Proportion of Recycled Fillers in Terms of 3D Printing Parameters - Ramirez Rodriguez Fatima, Ahmad Rafiq (2025-09)
Sustainable Technology Advances for Additive Construction:
A State-of-the-Art Review - Krishna R., Rehman Asif, Mishra Jyotirmoy, Saha Suman et al. (2024-06)
Additive Manufacturing of Geopolymer Composites for Sustainable Construction:
Critical Factors, Advancements, Challenges, and Future Directions - Christen Heidi, Zijl Gideon, Villiers Wibke (2022-05)
The Incorporation of Recycled Brick-Aggregate in 3D Printed Concrete - İlcan Hüseyin, Şahin Oğuzhan, Kul Anil, Yıldırım Gürkan et al. (2022-03)
Rheological Properties and Compressive Strength of Construction and Demolition Waste-Based Geopolymer Mortars for 3D Printing - Schuldt Steven, Jagoda Jeneé, Hoisington Andrew, Delorit Justin (2021-03)
A Systematic Review and Analysis of the Viability of 3D Printed Construction in Remote Environments
BibTeX
@inproceedings{anna_pand_ting_li.2018.FAMPo3PCMWRGA,
author = "Ashokreddy Annapareddy and Biranchi Narayan Panda and Guan Heng Andrew Ting and Mingyang Li and Ming Jen Tan",
title = "Flow And Mechanical Properties of 3D Printed Cementitious Material With Recycled Glass-Aggregates",
doi = "10.25341/d41p4h",
year = "2018",
pages = "68--73",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing",
editor = "Chee Kai Chua and Wai Yee Yeong and Ming Jen Tan and Erjia Liu",
}
Formatted Citation
A. Annapareddy, B. N. Panda, G. H. A. Ting, M. Li and M. J. Tan, “Flow And Mechanical Properties of 3D Printed Cementitious Material With Recycled Glass-Aggregates”, in Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing, 2018, pp. 68–73. doi: 10.25341/d41p4h.
Annapareddy, Ashokreddy, Biranchi Narayan Panda, Guan Heng Andrew Ting, Mingyang Li, and Ming Jen Tan. “Flow And Mechanical Properties of 3D Printed Cementitious Material With Recycled Glass-Aggregates”. In Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing, edited by Chee Kai Chua, Wai Yee Yeong, Ming Jen Tan, and Erjia Liu, 68–73, 2018. https://doi.org/10.25341/d41p4h.