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What's right: no more cracks in concrete?

A research team at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia has combined civil engineering and their wish to cut back on textile waste by using textile waste and carpet fibres to create sustainable concrete. Their approach not only diverts clothing and carpet waste from landfills — which is urgently needed when it’s estimated that the world produces 92 million tons of textile waste every year — but it also makes for stronger concrete, reducing early-age shrinkage cracking in concrete by up to 30%.

tags: Australia, Melbourne, RMIT University, landfills, textile waste, concrete, Construction and Building Materials journal, Chamila Gunasekara
categories: What's right
Thursday 11.21.24
Posted by Charlotte de Vreeze
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