灾后住房的建筑循环潜力:LCA,成本评估和材料优化

Ova Candra Dewi , Nasruddin , Nisrina Dewi Salsabila , Kartika Rahmasari , Gina Khairunnisa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

印度尼西亚是一个地震活跃的国家,经常发生地震,但在灾后住房中重新利用回收碎片的潜力仍未得到充分开发。本研究通过使用回收的碎片作为新材料的替代品来升级印度尼西亚的永久性灾后住房,旨在减少环境影响(EI)并最大限度地降低材料成本。EI分析是通过生命周期评估(LCA)在摇篮到大门阶段对2022年印度尼西亚Cianjur地震后建造的四种永久性灾后房屋(房屋A-D)进行的。初步评估显示,众议院D的情商最低。本研究评估了房屋A-C中蒸压加气混凝土(AAC)、非结构钢和铁皮的更换情况,以尽量减少其EI,使其更接近房屋D的值。通过响应面法(RSM)制定了优化方案,以确定在降低成本的同时降低EI的材料组合。因此,通过用回收的砖碎片代替AAC,房屋A-C实现了全球变暖潜力降低约23%,非生物耗损潜力降低30%,酸化潜力降低20%,同时材料成本降低3%-5%。这一发现代表了探索减少新材料和回收碎片再利用以降低灾后住房EI的第一步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Building circularity potential for post-disaster housing: LCA, cost evaluation, and material optimization
Indonesia, a seismically active country, frequently experiences earthquakes, yet the potential for reusing recovered debris in post-disaster housing remains largely unexplored. This study upgrades Indonesia's permanent post-disaster housing by using recovered debris as an alternative to new materials, aiming to reduce the environmental impact (EI) and minimize material costs. The EI analysis was conducted via life cycle assessment (LCA) at the cradle-to-gate stages for four types of permanent post-disaster houses (Houses A–D) built after the 2022 earthquake in Cianjur, Indonesia. The initial assessment identified House D as having the lowest EI. This study assesses the replacement of autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC), non-structural steel, and iron sheets in Houses A–C to minimize their EI, aligning them more closely with House D's values. Optimization scenarios were formulated via response surface methodology (RSM) to determine material combinations that reduce the EI while minimizing costs. Hence, by replacing AAC with recovered brick debris, Houses A–C achieved reductions of approximately 23% in global warming potential, 30% in abiotic depletion potential, and 20% in acidification potential while also lowering material costs by 3%–5%. This finding represents the initial step in exploring the reduction of new materials and reuse of recovered debris to decrease the EI of post-disaster housing.
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