Formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi-objective optimization using response surface methodology

This study presents the development and multi-objective optimization of a cement-free, carbon-sequestering binder system formulated entirely without Ordinary Portland Cement. The binder integrates iron-rich industrial waste, fly ash, metakaolin, and limestone, activated through oxalic acid to promot...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Niveditha M, Palanisamy T
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-09-01
Series:Results in Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590123025027823
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849405219047211008
author Niveditha M
Palanisamy T
author_facet Niveditha M
Palanisamy T
author_sort Niveditha M
collection DOAJ
description This study presents the development and multi-objective optimization of a cement-free, carbon-sequestering binder system formulated entirely without Ordinary Portland Cement. The binder integrates iron-rich industrial waste, fly ash, metakaolin, and limestone, activated through oxalic acid to promote iron carbonate formation during CO₂ curing. Response Surface Methodology was employed to model and optimize the combined effects of oxalic acid dosage, CO₂ curing pressure, CO₂ and air curing durations, water-to-binder ratio, and specimen geometry on compressive strength. The statistical model demonstrated high predictive reliability R² = 0.9847; predicted R² = 0.949 with a desirability score of 1.000. An optimized formulation comprising 2 % oxalic acid, 3 bar CO₂ curing pressure, 14 days of CO₂ curing, 5 days of air curing, and a water-to-binder ratio of 0.17 achieved an experimental compressive strength of 62.8 MPa with only 3.41 % absolute error from the predicted value. This strength exceeds typical neat cement paste ranges 25–35 MPa, highlighting the system's potential as a viable cement paste substitute. Microstructural analyses XRD, FTIR, FESEM confirmed the formation of siderite, calcite, goethite, and dense low-porosity matrices, while TGA-DTG validated CO₂ uptake via carbonate formation. Over 75 % of the binder consists of upcycled industrial waste, supporting circular economy goals and significantly reducing embodied carbon. The generalized regression model enables predictive strength estimation across curing regimes and mix designs, offering a reproducible, scalable approach for developing high-performance, low-carbon construction materials.
format Article
id doaj-art-bcbe24b1dc5444e7a4ece0a8d2b3b163
institution Kabale University
issn 2590-1230
language English
publishDate 2025-09-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Results in Engineering
spelling doaj-art-bcbe24b1dc5444e7a4ece0a8d2b3b1632025-08-20T03:36:44ZengElsevierResults in Engineering2590-12302025-09-012710671510.1016/j.rineng.2025.106715Formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi-objective optimization using response surface methodologyNiveditha M0Palanisamy T1Corresponding author.; National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Mangalore, Karnataka 575025, IndiaNational Institute of Technology Karnataka, Mangalore, Karnataka 575025, IndiaThis study presents the development and multi-objective optimization of a cement-free, carbon-sequestering binder system formulated entirely without Ordinary Portland Cement. The binder integrates iron-rich industrial waste, fly ash, metakaolin, and limestone, activated through oxalic acid to promote iron carbonate formation during CO₂ curing. Response Surface Methodology was employed to model and optimize the combined effects of oxalic acid dosage, CO₂ curing pressure, CO₂ and air curing durations, water-to-binder ratio, and specimen geometry on compressive strength. The statistical model demonstrated high predictive reliability R² = 0.9847; predicted R² = 0.949 with a desirability score of 1.000. An optimized formulation comprising 2 % oxalic acid, 3 bar CO₂ curing pressure, 14 days of CO₂ curing, 5 days of air curing, and a water-to-binder ratio of 0.17 achieved an experimental compressive strength of 62.8 MPa with only 3.41 % absolute error from the predicted value. This strength exceeds typical neat cement paste ranges 25–35 MPa, highlighting the system's potential as a viable cement paste substitute. Microstructural analyses XRD, FTIR, FESEM confirmed the formation of siderite, calcite, goethite, and dense low-porosity matrices, while TGA-DTG validated CO₂ uptake via carbonate formation. Over 75 % of the binder consists of upcycled industrial waste, supporting circular economy goals and significantly reducing embodied carbon. The generalized regression model enables predictive strength estimation across curing regimes and mix designs, offering a reproducible, scalable approach for developing high-performance, low-carbon construction materials.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590123025027823Carbonation curingCement-free binderResponse surface methodology (RSM)Iron-rich industrial wasteOxalic acid activationCO₂ sequestration
spellingShingle Niveditha M
Palanisamy T
Formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi-objective optimization using response surface methodology
Results in Engineering
Carbonation curing
Cement-free binder
Response surface methodology (RSM)
Iron-rich industrial waste
Oxalic acid activation
CO₂ sequestration
title Formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi-objective optimization using response surface methodology
title_full Formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi-objective optimization using response surface methodology
title_fullStr Formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi-objective optimization using response surface methodology
title_full_unstemmed Formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi-objective optimization using response surface methodology
title_short Formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi-objective optimization using response surface methodology
title_sort formulation of a carbon sink binder through multi objective optimization using response surface methodology
topic Carbonation curing
Cement-free binder
Response surface methodology (RSM)
Iron-rich industrial waste
Oxalic acid activation
CO₂ sequestration
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590123025027823
work_keys_str_mv AT niveditham formulationofacarbonsinkbinderthroughmultiobjectiveoptimizationusingresponsesurfacemethodology
AT palanisamyt formulationofacarbonsinkbinderthroughmultiobjectiveoptimizationusingresponsesurfacemethodology