International effort to reduce concrete鈥檚 carbon footprint
June 10, 2022
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How environmentally friendly is concrete? Less so than you might think. Reinforced concrete infrastructure accounts for almost 10 per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions 鈥 far ahead of the two per cent of carbon dioxide produced by the airline industry.
Working to change that are two Queen鈥檚 civil engineering experts Neil Hoult and Josh Woods, together with their academic collaborators at the University of Toronto and the University of Cambridge and a number of industry partners who are invested in making their technology and processes more sustainable.
鈥淚f we can reduce the carbon produced in concrete manufacturing by even a fraction, it鈥檚 going to have a significant positive benefit,鈥 says Neil Hoult, a professor in the Department of Civil Engineering. 鈥淚ncreased urbanization means that the demand for concrete is going up. Our research aims to cut the carbon dioxide emissions generated by concrete production in half 鈥 the equivalent of eliminating the airline industry, twice over.鈥
The research program is supported by industry leaders like Arup, Aecon, KPMB Architects, and Lafarge, along with the City of Kingston and the Cement Association of Canada, with funding sources including Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and Mitacs.
To achieve the goals set by Queen鈥檚 and its partners, several approaches will be explored to reduce carbon utilization. The first one is shape optimization, meaning studying how to better design structures to use less concrete 鈥 which reduces both material consumption and structure weight.
The second is what鈥檚 known as functionally graded concrete.
鈥淲e put concrete with higher strength where we need the strength, then we use lower strength concrete (which also means lower cement concrete) everywhere else,鈥 Dr. Hoult explains. 鈥淲e will be working on software packages that allow for these new techniques to be used in the design, optimizing structures for performance and low environmental impact.鈥
The bulk of the initial research and testing will be completed in the Queen鈥檚 civil engineering labs. Moving from the lab to practical applications, however, will take the project into the real world in Kingston, with the support of city and industry partners. The project includes the design of a demonstration structure at the Kingston Fire and Rescue Training Centre.
鈥淭he structure will be actively used by Kingston鈥檚 Fire Services as a classroom and as a living lab so that Queen鈥檚 and St. Lawrence College students can come and learn about low-carbon buildings. We鈥檙e aiming for a net-zero building philosophy,鈥 Dr. Hoult highlights.
Speros Kanellos, Director, Facilities Management, and Construction at the City of Kingston, says the city has been working with post-secondary educational partners on 鈥榣earning hubs鈥 to investigate new approaches and technologies to aggressively decarbonize infrastructure.
鈥淲e are working with the low-carbon concrete research team to develop a real-world application for demonstration purposes and ongoing research,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really exciting to participate as a partner in the kind of initiative that embodies the City鈥檚 and university鈥檚 leadership on climate action.鈥