Author
Listed:
- Francis O. Okeke
(School of Engineering, Technology and Design, Canterbury Christ Church University, Kent, Canterbury CT1 1QU, UK)
- Abdullahi Ahmed
(School of Engineering, Technology and Design, Canterbury Christ Church University, Kent, Canterbury CT1 1QU, UK)
- Adil Imam
(School of Engineering, Technology and Design, Canterbury Christ Church University, Kent, Canterbury CT1 1QU, UK)
- Hany Hassanin
(School of Engineering, Technology and Design, Canterbury Christ Church University, Kent, Canterbury CT1 1QU, UK)
Abstract
The construction sector faces pressure to decarbonise while addressing rising resource demands and agricultural waste. Ordinary Portland cement (OPC) is a major CO 2 emitter, yet biomass residues are often open-burned or landfilled. This study explores corncob ash (CCA) as a sustainable supplementary cementitious material (SCM), examining how calcination conditions influence pozzolanic potential and support circular economy and climate goals, which have not been adequately explored in literature. Ten CCA samples were produced via open-air burning (2–3.5 h) and electric-furnace calcination (400–1000 °C, 2 h), alongside a reference OPC. Mass yield, colour, XRD, XRF, LOI, and LOD were analysed within a process–structure–property–performance–sustainability framework. CCA produced in a 400–700 °C furnace window consistently achieved high amorphous contents (typically ≥80%) and combined pozzolanic oxides (SiO 2 + Al 2 O 3 + Fe 2 O 3 ) above the 70% ASTM C618 threshold, with 700 °C for 2 h emerging as an optimal condition. At 1000 °C, extensive crystallisation reduced the expected reactivity despite high total silica. Extended open-air burning (3–3.5 h) yielded chemically acceptable but more variable ashes, with lower amorphous content and higher alkalis than furnace-processed CCA. Simple industrial ecology calculations indicate that valorising a fraction of global CC residues and deploying optimally processed CCA at only 20% OPC replacement could displace 180 million tonnes CC waste and clinker avoidance on the order of 5–6 Mt CO 2 per year, while reducing uncontrolled residue burning and primary raw material extraction. The study provides an experimentally validated calcination window and quality indicators for producing reactive CCA, alongside a clear link from laboratory processing to clinker substitution, circular resource use, and alignment with SDGs 9, 12, and 13. The findings establish a materials science foundation for standardised CCA production protocols and future life cycle and performance evaluations of low-carbon CCA binders.
Suggested Citation
Francis O. Okeke & Abdullahi Ahmed & Adil Imam & Hany Hassanin, 2025.
"Calcination Optimisation of Corncob Ash for Sustainable Cementitious Applications: A Pathway to Low-Carbon Construction,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(1), pages 1-41, December.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2025:i:1:p:311-:d:1828288
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