This research was motivated by the urgent need to address resource shortages and high energy costs in concrete production by replacing an energy-intensive traditional curing method with a new, more sustainable solution. By exploring solar heat treatment with composite binders and THACs, the study aimed to develop sustainable, cost-effective alternatives that harness renewable energy sources and optimize natural cement hydration processes for accelerated hardening. This article explores the potential application of solar energy in the production of precast concrete products using a composite binder. The effectiveness of the composite binder in solar thermal treatment of concrete using translucent heat-accumulating coatings is tested. The results of laboratory studies are presented, and the feasibility of using concrete based on composite binder at the laboratory scale for the production of concrete and reinforced concrete products, both with steaming and with solar thermal treatment, is established. The study of the structural features and basic physical and mechanical properties of hardened concrete under various conditions indicates that, under the investigated laboratory conditions, solar-thermally treated concrete exhibits physical and mechanical properties comparable to those of normally cured concrete. Laboratory studies confirmed the effectiveness of both steaming and solar heat treatment methods under controlled experimental conditions. Within the scope of the performed laboratory tests, the structure and properties of these concretes were comparable to those of normally cured concretes and, in several aspects, superior to those obtained under conventional steam curing regimes, which indicates the effectiveness of the described method, not only from the point of view of significant savings in fuel and energy resources. When producing products based on composite binders using solar thermal treatment, the consumption of the clinker portion of the binder is reduced by 50% (composition of the composite binder itself) and the consumption of conventional fuel during heat and moisture treatment is reduced by 70–100 kg per 1 m3 of concrete (reflecting process-level comparisons), which is of significant value for external energy demand. These findings confirm the technical feasibility and environmental advantages of the proposed method at the laboratory scale and highlight its potential for broader industrial application in precast concrete production.
Utkelbaeva et al. (Sun,) studied this question.