Evaluating the mechanical performance of Kukui seed shells as coarse aggregates in light weight aggregate concrete
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Date
2025-11
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Publisher
Kyambogo University (Unpublished work)
Abstract
Uganda’s population growth, currently at 3.2% (UNhabitat, 2016), has increased the demand for residential, commercial, and industrial buildings. Concrete constitutes nearly 60% of construction materials on building sites (Aytekin et al., 2022), and aggregates contribute 70–85% of its total weight (Cement and Concrete Association of Australia, 2002). This places pressure on existing natural aggregate sources, creating the need for sustainable alternatives. Lightweight aggregates offer a potential solution, yet kukui seed shells (an organic and waste-derived option) have never been studied in the Ugandan context, despite their potential contribution to sustainable construction. This study adopted a combined experimental and numerical methodological framework to evaluate the suitability of kukui seed shells as lightweight aggregates. Mechanical characterization of the shells was followed by an experimental program in which normal aggregates were partially replaced with kukui seed shells at 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% for both Half Seed Shells and Quarter Seed Shells. The resulting concrete mixes were assessed through mechanical and water absorption, Fire resistance and Thermal conductivity performance tests, while serviceability behaviour was analysed using ANSYS finite element simulations. The shells demonstrated satisfactory Aggregate Impact Value (AIV), Aggregate Crushing Value (ACV), Los Angeles Abrasion (LAA), and soundness performance. Increasing the replacement percentage led to reductions in density, compressive strength, flexural strength, splitting tensile strength, and thermal conductivity. Quarter Seed Shell mixes generally outperformed Half Seed Shell mixes. Based on overall performance, a 50% replacement using Quarter Seed Shells is recommended, yielding a compressive strength of 25.1 MPa, thermal conductivity of 1.6 W/mK, and reduced density of 2,112 kg/m³, making it a viable lightweight concrete option for sustainable construction in Uganda.
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Keywords
Concrete, Testing, Lightweight aggregate concrete, Aggregates (Building materials), Kukui, Seeds, Experimental study, Kukui seed shells, mechanical and physical properties, durability performance, light weight aggregate concrete.
Citation
Bagombeka, A. (2025).Evaluating the mechanical performance of Kukui seed shells as coarse aggregates in light weight aggregate concrete.Kyambogo University (Unpublished work)