A. Yazdanbakhsh et al, "Concrete with discrete slender elements from mechanically recycled wind turbine blades "
Abstract: A wind turbine blade shell made of glass fiber reinforced polymer (GFRP) composite materials was mechanically processed into slender elements referred to as “Needles”. The Needles were used to replace 5% and 10% of the coarse aggregate, by volume, in concrete mixtures that were tested to investigate a number of important properties of fresh and hardened concrete. It was found that the Needles did not affect the stability and workability of fresh concrete negatively. Although the incorporation of the Needles did not have a notable effect on compressive, tensile, and flexural strength of concrete, it resulted in a significant increase in energy absorption capacity (toughness) from 1.2J in control specimens up to 33.3J in those with 10% Needle replacement. A polymer burn-off test revealed that, due to the directions in which the shell was cut, in most of the Needles glass fibers were perpendicular to the Needle axis, and therefore to the tensile stress carried by the Needles. Although the Needles with transversely-aligned fibers improve the mechanical performance of concrete, if the cutting directions of wind blades can be optimized so that in the majority of the Needles the fibers are primarily aligned longitudinally, improvements are expected to be more significant. Keywords: Concrete; GFRP; Needles; Recycled; Wind turbine blade
Citation: Ardavan Yazdanbakhsh, Lawrence C. Bank, Klaus-Alexander Rieder, Yuan Tian, Chen Chen, Concrete with discrete slender elements from mechanically recycled wind turbine blades, Resources, Conservation and Recycling, Volume 128, 2018, Pages 11-21, ISSN 0921-3449, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resconrec.2017.08.005