Replacing conventional coal pillars with cemented gangue backfill material (CGBM) enables co-optimized mine waste reduction at source and goaf stability control. However, its industrial-scale application is constrained by the multi-objective optimization trade-offs involving binder cost, carbon emission intensity, and mechanical performance. This study synthesizes CGBM via in-situ alkali activation of coal gangue. Utilizing a combination of uniaxial compression, acoustic emission (AE), scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDS), Thermogravimetric (TG/DTG), and X-ray diffraction (XRD), the multi-scale regulatory mechanisms of the activator dosage on the strength evolution, micro-defect distribution, and phase composition of the resulting CGBM were elucidated. Molecular dynamics simulations further elucidate fracture propagation and energy dissipation patterns in calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H) molecular models under tensile loading. The results demonstrate that properly controlling activator dosage significantly enhances the uniaxial compressive strength (UCS) of CGBM and its load-bearing capacity in the dilatancy deformation phase, while concurrently reducing both the AE counts and distribution density during the initial compression and linear elasticity deformation phases; the optimal activator content for maximizing UCS ranges from 12.87% to 16.02%. Regulating activator dosage effectively reduces micro-defect populations (e.g., micropores and microcracks) while promoting secondary hydration of gangue to generate abundant hydration products that repair localized damage. Alkali-induced variation in calcium-to-silica (C/S) ratio governs C-S-H molecular mechanics: an optimal ratio enhances stress transfer via compacted silicate chain layers and stabilizes water-rich layers through calcium-mediated bridging bonds, while homogenizing energy distribution to suppress mesoscale fracture initiation from localized high-potential-energy concentrations.
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Yiming Wang
University of Science and Technology of China
Yiying Feng
University of Science and Technology of China
Jianmin Wu
Shenyang Pharmaceutical University
Journal of Materials Research and Technology
University of Oxford
University of Science and Technology of China
China University of Mining and Technology
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Wang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0809bea487c87a6a40b8ef — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmrt.2026.05.148