Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash

Portland cement and rice husk ash were incorporated to stabilize and solidify the contaminant in petroleum sludge. Stabilization and solidification technique was chosen as an alternative treatment to reduce toxicity of the sludge prior to final disposal of the waste. The sludge has significant amoun...

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Main Authors: Mohd Zain, Asna, Shaaban, Md Ghazaly, Mahmud, Hilmi
Format: Article
Published: 2010
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Online Access:http://eprints.utp.edu.my/7483/
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spelling my.utp.eprints.74832014-04-02T01:03:07Z Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash Mohd Zain, Asna Shaaban, Md Ghazaly Mahmud, Hilmi TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) Portland cement and rice husk ash were incorporated to stabilize and solidify the contaminant in petroleum sludge. Stabilization and solidification technique was chosen as an alternative treatment to reduce toxicity of the sludge prior to final disposal of the waste. The sludge has significant amount of organic material which normally interfere with the cement hydration process. A way to improve is by incorporation of cement replacement material. Mixture proportioning was conducted to find optimum water to cement ratio, sludge to cement ratio and cement replacement percentage. The solidified sludge performance was measured by compressive strength and permeable porosity. The optimum ratio of water to cement was found at 0.45 and cement to sludge of 8. Rice husk ash (RHA) was added at 5, 10 and 15 % cement replacement. 5 % RHA exhibited the best performance with regards to unconfined compressive of 24.9 N/mm2. The strength was better than the sludge cement of 19.2 N/mm2. Permeable porosity has inverse relationship with strength at water to cement ratio of 0.4. However at water to cement ratio of 0.45, the relationship showed different trend where increase in porosity cause increase in strength. Porosity was found to increase with increasing RHA content. The surface morphology of solidified cement with voids was found to be in the range of 10 to 15 mm for 15 % RHA. 2010 Article PeerReviewed Http://www.ijcea.org Mohd Zain, Asna and Shaaban, Md Ghazaly and Mahmud, Hilmi (2010) Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash. International J. of Chemical Engineering and Application, 1 (3). pp. 234-239. ISSN 2010-0221 http://eprints.utp.edu.my/7483/
institution Universiti Teknologi Petronas
building UTP Resource Centre
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Petronas
content_source UTP Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utp.edu.my/
topic TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
spellingShingle TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Mohd Zain, Asna
Shaaban, Md Ghazaly
Mahmud, Hilmi
Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash
description Portland cement and rice husk ash were incorporated to stabilize and solidify the contaminant in petroleum sludge. Stabilization and solidification technique was chosen as an alternative treatment to reduce toxicity of the sludge prior to final disposal of the waste. The sludge has significant amount of organic material which normally interfere with the cement hydration process. A way to improve is by incorporation of cement replacement material. Mixture proportioning was conducted to find optimum water to cement ratio, sludge to cement ratio and cement replacement percentage. The solidified sludge performance was measured by compressive strength and permeable porosity. The optimum ratio of water to cement was found at 0.45 and cement to sludge of 8. Rice husk ash (RHA) was added at 5, 10 and 15 % cement replacement. 5 % RHA exhibited the best performance with regards to unconfined compressive of 24.9 N/mm2. The strength was better than the sludge cement of 19.2 N/mm2. Permeable porosity has inverse relationship with strength at water to cement ratio of 0.4. However at water to cement ratio of 0.45, the relationship showed different trend where increase in porosity cause increase in strength. Porosity was found to increase with increasing RHA content. The surface morphology of solidified cement with voids was found to be in the range of 10 to 15 mm for 15 % RHA.
format Article
author Mohd Zain, Asna
Shaaban, Md Ghazaly
Mahmud, Hilmi
author_facet Mohd Zain, Asna
Shaaban, Md Ghazaly
Mahmud, Hilmi
author_sort Mohd Zain, Asna
title Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash
title_short Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash
title_full Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash
title_fullStr Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash
title_full_unstemmed Immobilization of Petroleum Sludge Incorporating Portland Cement and Rice Husk Ash
title_sort immobilization of petroleum sludge incorporating portland cement and rice husk ash
publishDate 2010
url http://eprints.utp.edu.my/7483/
_version_ 1738655581313433600
score 13.209306