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From coffee waste to concrete

Freshly brewed coffee concrete may be coming to a street near you after RMIT University teamed up with Macedon Ranges Shire Council to conduct a world-first coffee concrete footpath trial.

Organic waste going to landfill, including spent coffee grounds, contributes 3% of greenhouse gas emissions, but Dr Rajeev Roychand and his colleagues at RMIT are set on transforming this waste into a valuable resource for the construction industry.

The team has developed a technique to make concrete 30% stronger by using coffee biochar made with a low-energy process without oxygen at 350 degrees Celsius, to give the drink-additive a “double shot” at life and reduce waste going to landfill.

Several other upcoming infrastructure projects around Victoria are planned, with Australian-owned BildGroup – a civil infrastructure, asphalt paving and road profiling company – to help deliver these circular-economy projects.

The researchers will evaluate the performance of the concrete in these trial footpaths, with the aim of supporting the further roll out of this innovation.

“We are currently working in the supply chain sector so that we can make this research into a mainstream product for commercial applications, and we’re not only looking into coffee – we’re expanding this into all forms of different organic waste,” Roychand said.

Australia generates 75 million kilograms of ground coffee waste every year – most of it goes to landfills, but it could replace up to 655 million kilograms of sand in concrete because it is a denser material. Globally, 10 billion kilograms of spent coffee is generated annually, which could replace up to 90 billion kilograms of sand in concrete.

Learn more about the innovation here.

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