Toward 3D Printable Low-Carbon Mortar (2024-11)¶
, , Loulha Sarena, ,
Contribution - Proceedings of the RILEM Spring Convention and Conference 2024, pp. 221-230
Abstract
Because the environmental impact of 3D printable mixtures by weight is often higher than traditional mixtures due to their high clinker content [1], the benefit of material savings through optimization and digital manufacturing may thus be annihilated by the difficulty to formulate printable mixes with low binder content [2]. This paper aims to develop a methodology for designing cementitious materials specifically tailored for large-scale 3D printing of mortar in bi-component printing systems. This method, developed and used in this study, focuses on the packing density of a dry mix because high packing density is one of the key factors for obtaining ultra-high-performance cementitious materials, but packing density also plays a role in the fresh state, influencing various properties of dense suspensions, including rheological properties and stability, which are highly important in 3D printing applications and can be related to the three steps of a 3D printing process: Pumpability, extrudability, buildability [3]. To compute the packing density of futures mixes, the Compressive Packing Model [4, 5]was used.With various sets ofrawmaterials, four differentmixes were formulated with this method: a high performance mortar, a PLC (Portland, Limestone, Cement), a low carbon PLC, and a LC3 (Limestone filer, Cement, Calcinated-Clay). These mixes were tested at small scale to validate their rheological properties, particularly the yield stress. Pumpability, extrudability and buildability were evaluated by utilizing these mixtures in different large-scale printing sessions. The compressive strengths of these mixtures is characterized, and the carbon intensity [6]oftheses mix is be discussed.
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5 References
- Bhattacherjee Shantanu, Basavaraj Anusha, Rahul Attupurathu, Santhanam Manu et al. (2021-06)
Sustainable Materials for 3D Concrete Printing - Bono Victor, Ducoulombier Nicolas, Mesnil Romain, Caron Jean-François (2023-12)
Methodology for Formulating Low-Carbon Printable Mortar Through Particles-Packing-Optimization - Buswell Richard, Silva Wilson, Bos Freek, Schipper Roel et al. (2020-05)
A Process Classification Framework for Defining and Describing Digital Fabrication with Concrete - Flatt Robert, Wangler Timothy (2022-05)
On Sustainability and Digital Fabrication with Concrete - Roux Charlotte, Kuzmenko Kateryna, Roussel Nicolas, Mesnil Romain et al. (2022-11)
Life Cycle Assessment of a Concrete 3D Printing Process
BibTeX
@inproceedings{bono_duco_loul_mesn.2025.T3PLCM,
author = "Victor de Bono and Nicolas Ducoulombier and Sarena Loulha and Romain Mesnil and Jean-François Caron",
title = "Toward 3D Printable Low-Carbon Mortar: Method and Application",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-031-70281-5_25",
year = "2025",
volume = "56",
pages = "221--230",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the RILEM Spring Convention and Conference 2024",
editor = "Liberato Ferrara and Giovanni Muciaccia and Davide di Summa",
}
Formatted Citation
V. de Bono, N. Ducoulombier, S. Loulha, R. Mesnil and J.-F. Caron, “Toward 3D Printable Low-Carbon Mortar: Method and Application”, in Proceedings of the RILEM Spring Convention and Conference 2024, 2025, vol. 56, pp. 221–230. doi: 10.1007/978-3-031-70281-5_25.
Bono, Victor de, Nicolas Ducoulombier, Sarena Loulha, Romain Mesnil, and Jean-François Caron. “Toward 3D Printable Low-Carbon Mortar: Method and Application”. In Proceedings of the RILEM Spring Convention and Conference 2024, edited by Liberato Ferrara, Giovanni Muciaccia, and Davide di Summa, 56:221–30, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-70281-5_25.