This paper is published in Volume-9, Issue-2, 2023
Area
Civil Engineering
Author
Krupanjali S. Bhange, Trupti S. Batale, Swati V. Patmas, Mahesh S. Gore, Sarvesh S. Chavan
Org/Univ
Vidya Vikas Pratishthan's Institute of Engineering and Technology, Solapur, Maharashtra, India
Pub. Date
22 June, 2023
Paper ID
V9I2-1376
Publisher
Keywords
Plastic, Sand, Brick

Citationsacebook

IEEE
Krupanjali S. Bhange, Trupti S. Batale, Swati V. Patmas, Mahesh S. Gore, Sarvesh S. Chavan. Waste Plastic Brick, International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology, www.IJARIIT.com.

APA
Krupanjali S. Bhange, Trupti S. Batale, Swati V. Patmas, Mahesh S. Gore, Sarvesh S. Chavan (2023). Waste Plastic Brick. International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology, 9(2) www.IJARIIT.com.

MLA
Krupanjali S. Bhange, Trupti S. Batale, Swati V. Patmas, Mahesh S. Gore, Sarvesh S. Chavan. "Waste Plastic Brick." International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology 9.2 (2023). www.IJARIIT.com.

Abstract

Brick is one of the very common and important construction materials which is used in all masonry work. A large land area is used. for acquiring the clay for brick making. The word replacement has become a very common thing worldwide. More land area is being acquired for clay in brick making. This paper outlines the utilization of plastic waste in construction industries. Plastic waste use in the construction industries is increasing rapidly and the world’s recycling rate of either plastic waste specifically is still low. The production of bricks is non-eco-friendly and a waste-generating process because of the greenhouse gases released. Utilizing plastic as construction materials, especially in the production of bricks is one of the promising steps towards sustainable resources and waste management. Plastic waste can substitute either partially or completely one or more of the materials in brick production. To make this reduced replacement of waste materials can be done. This was then molded into bricks with a mold of size 190x90x90 mm. Further research based on recent research and a better understanding of the utilization of plastic waste in bricks is needed to produce high-durability and quality bricks as well as to achieve the optimum balance in all aspects, especially in terms of cost and functionality.