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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - In the last 10 years, the nation has seen
a surge in household recycling. Communities across the country
are collecting tons of recycled material everyday. This trend
led Dr. Andrew Graettinger, an assistant professor of civil and
environmental engineering at The University of Alabama, to
develop a new lightweight fill made of recycled plastic bottles.
Traditionally, soil fills the space behind retaining walls,
such as those built for interstate highway dividers and sound
barriers. Soil is extremely heavy and exerts a lot of pressure
against the retaining wall. Over time, the wall can lean or
crack because of the pressure.
The plastic bottle blocks would be used in replacing soil
behind interstate highway retaining walls. The blocks would be
covered with some soil and grass for aesthetic purposes.
“The plastic bottle blocks weigh considerably less than
soil,” said Graettinger. “For construction applications, the
lighter-weight plastic bottle fill is easier to handle and will
save money because the retaining wall does not have to be as
strong.”
The plastic bottle blocks are approximately 2-feet high by
2-feet wide by 2-feet deep and contain 150-200 plastic bottles.
Urethane foam holds the bottles together in the square block
form. The 4-square-foot bottle block can withstand up to 2 tons
of weight.
The blocks weigh approximately 2 pounds/cubic foot compared
to soil which weighs approximately 110 pounds/cubic foot.
“This means that five stories of plastic bottle fill weigh the
same as one foot of soil,” explained Graettinger.
Graettinger was awarded a research grant from the University
for this project. He also received new plastic bottles from the
Coca-Cola Co. to help with initial testing by forming a control
group of bottle blocks that were made with all of the same type
of bottle.
“We have started making blocks out of recycled bottles and
have seen no difference in weight and strength testing,”
continued Graettinger. “It is exciting to work on a project
that solves an engineering problem and provides a new
environmental recycling initiative.”
In 1837, UA became the first university in the state to offer
engineering classes and was one of the first five in the nation
to do so. Today, the College
of Engineering, with about 1,900 students and more than 90
faculty, is one of the three oldest continuously operating
engineering programs in the country and has been fully
accredited since accreditation standards were implemented in the
1930s.
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