Computers and Concrete
Volume 33, Number 1, 2024, pages 77-90
DOI: 10.12989/cac.2024.33.1.077
An advanced machine learning technique to predict compressive strength of green concrete incorporating waste foundry sand
Danial Jahed Armaghani, Haleh Rasekh and Panagiotis G. Asteris
Abstract
Waste foundry sand (WFS) is the waste product that cause environmental hazards. WFS can be used as a partial
replacement of cement or fine aggregates in concrete. A database comprising 234 compressive strength tests of concrete
fabricated with WFS is used. To construct the machine learning-based prediction models, the water-to-cement ratio, WFS
replacement percentage, WFS-to-cement content ratio, and fineness modulus of WFS were considered as the model's inputs,
and the compressive strength of concrete is set as the model's output. A base extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost) model
together with two hybrid XGBoost models mixed with the tunicate swarm algorithm (TSA) and the salp swarm algorithm (SSA)
were applied. The role of TSA and SSA is to identify the optimum values of XGBoost hyperparameters to obtain the higher
performance. The results of these hybrid techniques were compared with the results of the base XGBoost model in order to
investigate and justify the implementation of optimisation algorithms. The results showed that the hybrid XGBoost models are
faster and more accurate compared to the base XGBoost technique. The XGBoost-SSA model shows superior performance
compared to previously published works in the literature, offering a reduced system error rate. Although the WFS-to-cement
ratio is significant, the WFS replacement percentage has a smaller influence on the compressive strength of concrete. To
improve the compressive strength of concrete fabricated with WFS, the simultaneous consideration of the water-to-cement ratio
and fineness modulus of WFS is recommended.
Key Words
compressive strength of concrete; extreme gradient boosting; green concrete; optimisation algorithms; waste foundry sand
Address
Danial Jahed Armaghani and Haleh Rasekh: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia
Panagiotis G. Asteris: Computational Mechanics Laboratory, School of Pedagogical and Technological Education, Heraklion, GR, 14121 Athens, Greece