Incorporation of Vitrified Ashes in Lightweight Foamed Concrete for 3D Printing (2026-01)¶
Cárdenas Valeria, Parmigiani Silvia, Vargas Juan, , Fabrizio Enrico, Fantucci Stefano
Contribution - Construction, Energy, Environment and Sustainability, pp. 295-303
Abstract
Disposing of urban solid waste incineration residues, particularly ashes, poses significant environmental challenges. Vitrification, a process that transforms incineration ashes into stable materials, offers a promising pathway for sustainable reuse in building construction. This research focuses on incorporating vitrified incineration ashes in foamed concrete mixtures to develop building components, maintaining satisfactory thermal and mechanical properties while reducing their carbon footprint. Additive Manufacturing (AM) is a growing technology that offers remarkable flexibility to explore intricate geometries and develop highly efficient components that are often challenging to produce or unattainable with traditional techniques. A novel lightweight foamed concrete incorporating vitrified ashes was developed to produce 3D-printed wall components, and its thermal and mechanical properties were assessed. The printability of the material was evaluated utilizing Liquid Deposition Modelling (LDM) with a DeltaWASP 40100 3D printer. The thermal conductivity of cast samples, and the flexural and compressive strength of 3D printed specimens were assessed experimentally. The results were compared with baseline samples (without vitrified ashes). ASTM C518 standard was used to make the thermal assessment, and UNI EN 196-1 regulation was followed to perform the mechanical tests. Results show that the incorporation of glass ashes determines a negligible alteration of the thermal properties. By comparing 3D-printed specimens, flexural strength decreases while compressive strength significantly improves (up to 31% more compared to the baseline samples). Overall, this approach underscores the potential of 3D printing incorporating waste materials in the admixture to develop efficient, high-performance wall components for the building sector.
¶
4 References
- Markin Slava, Krause Martin, Otto Jens, Schröfl Christof et al. (2021-06)
3D Printing with Foam-Concrete:
From Material Design and Testing to Application and Sustainability - Markin Slava, Nerella Venkatesh, Schröfl Christof, Guseynova Gyunay et al. (2019-07)
Material-Design and Performance-Evaluation of Foam-Concrete for Digital Fabrication - Parmigiani Silvia, Falliano Devid, Moro Sandro, Ferro Giuseppe et al. (2024-06)
3D Printed Multi-Functional Foamed Concrete Building Components:
Material-Properties, Component Design, and 3D Printing Application - Rudziewicz Magdalena, Maroszek Marcin, Góra Mateusz, Dziura Paweł et al. (2023-09)
Feasibility Review of Aerated Materials Application in 3D Concrete Printing
0 Citations
BibTeX
@inproceedings{card_parm_varg_rest.2026.IoVAiLFCf3P,
author = "Valeria Villamil Cárdenas and Silvia Parmigiani and Juan Diego Vargas and Luciana Restuccia and Enrico Fabrizio and Stefano Fantucci",
title = "Incorporation of Vitrified Ashes in Lightweight Foamed Concrete for 3D Printing: Thermal and Mechanical Assessment",
doi = "10.1007/978-981-95-1822-7_31",
year = "2026",
volume = "743",
pages = "295--303",
booktitle = "Construction, Energy, Environment and Sustainability",
}
Formatted Citation
V. V. Cárdenas, S. Parmigiani, J. D. Vargas, L. Restuccia, E. Fabrizio and S. Fantucci, “Incorporation of Vitrified Ashes in Lightweight Foamed Concrete for 3D Printing: Thermal and Mechanical Assessment”, in Construction, Energy, Environment and Sustainability, 2026, vol. 743, pp. 295–303. doi: 10.1007/978-981-95-1822-7_31.
Cárdenas, Valeria Villamil, Silvia Parmigiani, Juan Diego Vargas, Luciana Restuccia, Enrico Fabrizio, and Stefano Fantucci. “Incorporation of Vitrified Ashes in Lightweight Foamed Concrete for 3D Printing: Thermal and Mechanical Assessment”. In Construction, Energy, Environment and Sustainability, 743:295–303, 2026. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-95-1822-7_31.