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Wood fly ash and blast furnace slag management by alkali-activation: Trace elements solidification and composite application.

Wood and biomass are burned in many industries as a sustainable energy source. The large quantities of fly ash produced must be landfilled, leading to environmental concerns. Precipitator wood fly ash (PFA) and ground granulated blast furnace slag (BFS) have been used in this study to prepare alkali-activated composites to manage and recycle the fly ash. After an essential characterization, the influence of parameters such as PFA and BFS content, alkaline activator content (silica moduli of 0, 0.82, 1.32), curing method, and curing duration on the mechanical, chemical, and microstructural properties of the samples have been studied through compressive strength, density, FTIR, and SEM-EDS investigations. The environmental safety and influence of polycondensation on heavy metal stabilization have been examined through ICP-MS. The results prove that oven and hydrothermal curing obtain the early age strength. Despite the variations of strength with duration and type of curing, the compressive strength of samples after 28 days of curing tends to close values for a constant PFA/BFS ratio, due to which the need for energy-intensive curing methods is addressed. ICP-MS shows that the composites can suitably solidify As, Cd, Ba, Cr, Pb, Mo, Se, Hg, Sr, Cu, and Zn. On the other hand, the composites were almost incapable of stabilizing Co and V. Unlike the case for mechanical properties; higher PFA content favours hazardous metal stabilization through polycondensation.

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