Full of beans: scientists use processed coffee grounds to make stronger concrete

Table of Contents
Issue Date

Australian engineers say they can make concrete nearly 30% stronger by incorporating processed grounds into the material

Donna Lu
@donnadlu
Tue 22 Aug 2023 16.00 BST
In an idea that fittingly arose over a cup of coffee, researchers have devised a technique to recycle used coffee grounds to make stronger concrete.

Engineers at RMIT University say they have developed a way to make concrete nearly 30% stronger by incorporating processed coffee grounds into the material.

The researchers have converted waste coffee grounds into biochar, a lightweight residue similar to charcoal, and used that biochar to replace a portion of the sand required to make concrete.

The idea arose from a desire to minimise coffee waste within the workplace, said study co-lead Dr Shannon Kilmartin-Lynch, a vice-chancellor’s Indigenous postdoctoral research fellow at RMIT.

Samples of unroasted coffee beans, roasted coffee beans, spent ground coffee and the team’s coffee biochar.
Samples of unroasted coffee beas, roasted coffee beans, spent ground coffee and the team’s coffee biochar. Photograph: Carelle Mulawa-Richards, RMIT University
“There was a lot of ground coffee and coffee pods being discarded,” he said. “[We wanted] to see if we could transform those spent coffee grounds into a more valuable sort of material.”

The researchers are now collaborating with local councils on future infrastructure projects such as the construction of walkways and pavements.

The technique could be environmentally beneficial if it can reduce the amount of coffee waste going to landfill, as well as the demand for natural sand used in the construction industry, the engineers say.

Food waste accounts for about 3% of Australia’s annual greenhouse emissions, according to the National Food Waste Strategy Feasibility Study. Australia produces an estimated 75,000 tonnes of coffee waste per year.

Creating biochar involves roasting used coffee grounds in the same way unused beans are roasted to enhance their tase, said study co-lead Dr Rajeev Roychand of RMIT.

“We do the same thing, but in the absence of oxygen [to prevent carbon dioxide from being produced],” Roychand said. “We don’t want carbon to get into the atmosphere and add to greenhouse gas emissions.”

The process, called pyrolysis, involves heating the coffee waste to about 350C. The team says their technique is more energy efficient because it requires lower than usual temperatures.

“Typically pyrolysis has a high energy [input] because you need to raise temperatures to somewhere between 700 to 900C,” Kilmartin-Lynch said.

By replacing 15% of the sand typically used in concrete with coffee biochar, the researchers found that the addition enhanced strength by 29.3%.

Talwali co-founder Drew Paten and RMIT researchers Dr Rajeev Roychand, Dr Shannon Kilmartin-Lynch and Dr Mohammad Saberian.
Talwali co-founder Drew Paten and RMIT researchers Dr Rajeev Roychand, Dr Shannon Kilmartin-Lynch and Dr Mohammad Saberian. Photograph: Carell Mulawa-Richards, RMIT University
“Structurally, the coffee biochar itself is finer than a sand … but it’s also a porous material, so it allows the cement to bind within the porous structure of the biochar itself,” Kilmartin-Lynch said.

“It definitely still is in its initial phase – there are further tests to be done on the durability and things like that.”

If all waste coffee grounds produced in Australia each year were converted into biochar, it would amount to roughly 22,500 tonnes, the researchers estimate.

However, about 28.8 million tonnes of sand are required each year to produce the approximately 72,000 million tonnes of cement concrete made in Australia.

The research was published in the journal Journal of Cleaner Production.

You’ve read 6 articles in the last year
Article count
on
… there is a good reason why not to support the Guardian.

Not everyone can afford to pay for news right now. That is why we keep our journalism open for everyone to read, including in Egypt. f this is you, please continue to read for free.

But if you are able to, then there are three good reasons to support us today.

1. Our quality, investigative journalism is a scrutinising force at a time when the rich and powerful are getting away with more and more

2. We are independent and have no billionaire owner pulling the strings, so your money directly powers our reporting

3. It doesn’t cost much, and takes less time than it took to read this message

Help power the Guardian’s journalism for the years to come, whether with a small sum or a larger one. If you can, please support us on a monthly basis from just $2. It takes less than a minute to set up, and you can rest assured that you’re making a big impact every single month in support of open, independent journalism. Thank you.