Review Article

A Systematic Review on the Performance Characteristics of Sustainable, Unfired Admixed Soil Blocks for Agricultural and Industrial Waste Management

Table 4

Binders and fibers used for making unfired admixed soil blocks in published papers (n = 36).

Ref.Binders used in the studyFibers used in the study

[8]CementCoconut fiber
[9]Cement, sugarcane bagasse ash
[12]CementKraftterra
[13]Cement, sugarcane bagasse ash, hydrated lime
[14]Cement
[17]Cement, limestone waste, granite waste
[18]Cement, grit
[19]Cement, kaolin
[6]CementFibers of waste mineral water bottles and waste carry bags
[25]Cement, bacillus pasteurii KCTC 3558, effective microorganisms (EM)
[33]Cement
[37]Cement, rice husk ash
[15]Cement
[30]Cement, construction debris
[32]Cement, sugarcane bagasse ash
[23]CementMineral wool waste, sisal fiber
[34]Cement, bitumen emulsion, calcium silicate, slaked lime
[35]Cement, produced water from oil fields
[36]Cement
[38]Cement, rice husk ash, lime
[7]Cement
[40]Cement, limestone residues
[16]Cement, green mussel shell powderPig hair fibers
[20]Sugarcane bagasse ash
[10]Rice husk ash, lime
[5]Demolition residue, lime
[26]Bagasse fiber, coconut fiber, oil palm fiber
[27]Sugarcane bagasse, coconut husk, oil palm fruit
[28]Sugarcane bagasse, coconut husk, oil palm fruit
[39]Alkali- resistant glass, polypropylene, banana, and jute
[29]CementMacro synthetic polypropylene fibers, master fiber MAC matrix
[21]Fly ash, rice husk ash
[22]Cement, kaolin
[24]Cement, rice husk ash
[31]Fly ash, lime