The incorporation of lithium slag (LS) as a supplementary cementitious material (SCM) has consistently demonstrated notable enhancements in the mechanical properties of concrete. Studies show that LS improves strength, stiffness, shrinkage, and creep resistance. These parameters are critical in assessing structural integrity, serviceability, and long-term durability in concrete applications.
Among the evaluated parameters, compressive strength remains the most comprehensively studied. Partial replacement of ordinary Portland cement (OPC) with LS—typically between 15% and 30%—has been shown to significantly enhance compressive strength, attributable to increased pozzolanic activity, pore refinement, and matrix densification [
20,
26,
33]. The formation of secondary calcium-silicate-hydrate (C–S–H) and ettringite (AFt) further contributes to a denser and more cohesive microstructure, improving load-bearing capacity under sustained and cyclic conditions.
In addition to compressive strength, LS contributes positively to splitting tensile and flexural strength, as well as stiffness (elastic modulus), by mitigating microcracking, enhancing particle packing, and refining pore structure [
24,
29]. The porous morphology of LS particles supports internal curing by retaining water, which facilitates sustained hydration and reduces early-age cracking.
2.3.1. Compressive Strength
Numerous studies have identified 20% lithium slag (LS) replacement as the optimal dosage for enhancing the compressive strength of concrete. The studies [
33] and [
26] tested LS at 0%, 10%, 20%, and 30% cement replacement levels, reporting that 20% LS consistently yielded the highest compressive strength from 28 to 90 days. Specifically, the 20% LS mix outperformed both the control and other replacement levels, achieving 5–10% higher strength at 90 days. These improvements were attributed to continued pozzolanic activity, pore structure refinement, and secondary hydration, as confirmed via mercury intrusion porosimetry [
33].
The authors of [
20] investigated a broader dosage spectrum, evaluating lithium slag (LS) replacements up to 60% and comparing performance with that of equivalent fly ash (FA) mixes. At 28 days, the 20% LS mix achieved a peak compressive strength of 49.3 MPa, slightly outperforming both the control and 20% FA mix. Strength gains continued over time, with the 40% LS mix reaching 58.6 MPa by day 90, approximately 65% higher than its FA counterpart. These results highlight LS’s superior long-term pozzolanic reactivity and confirm its technical viability up to 40% substitution.
In the context of ultra-high-performance concrete (UHPC), lithium slag exhibited similar benefits. The investigation [
29] reported that incorporating 20% LS into a UHPC mixture—containing steel fibres and a low water-to-binder ratio—resulted in a 28-day compressive strength of 134.5 MPa, marginally exceeding that of the control mix without LS. This enhancement was attributed to internal curing effects and the nucleation potential of LS for calcium silicate hydrate (C–S–H) formation, highlighting its efficacy as a high-reactivity ultrafine pozzolanic material. The study [
35] investigated the mechanical properties of the LS as SCM substitute while varying the particle size. The authors revealed that the particle size of 11.71 μm of LS achieves a high compressive strength of 28 days, which is 107% higher compared to OPC.
The investigation [
26] and [
24] further validated the 20–30% LS replacement range for normal-strength concrete. Authors of [
20] found that 20% LS led to an ~8% improvement over the control at 28 days, while 10% and 30% yielded slightly lower results. Further, the study [
24] demonstrated that 20% LS compensated for the strength loss typically associated with recycled aggregates. Their 20% LS + recycled aggregate mix reached a compressive strength equal to or exceeding the control made with natural aggregates. However, strength again declined at 40% LS, aligning with previous findings on the limits of high-volume substitution.
The previous study [
36] explored a binary system combining LS with iron ore tailings (IOTs) and found that a 20% LS mix achieved 52 MPa, an increase of 15% over the control. This enhancement was linked to improved interfacial transition zones (ITZ) due to reduced calcium hydroxide and increased C–S–H formation. The previous investigation[
22] reported that 20–40% LS replacement consistently achieved compressive strengths around 50 MPa, with improvements of 10–20% over the control. They noted that beyond 20%, strength gains began to plateau, indicating diminishing returns with higher LS content. The study [
37] revealed that 40% cement replacement of LS was able to show 18.34% higher compressive strength at 180 days compared to the control mix. Further, they observed that beyond the 60% replacement of LS led to a decline in the concrete properties.
Collectively, these findings reinforce that LS, particularly at 20–30% replacement levels, enhances compressive strength across a variety of concrete systems. This is primarily due to its active pozzolanic reactivity, pore refinement capability, and ability to promote long-term strength development via sustained C–S–H generation. These results establish LS as a technically robust SCM with consistent performance advantages over conventional fly ash or high OPC content systems. As detailed in
Table 4, compressive strength consistently improved with LS substitution, particularly around 20–30%.
The compressive strength data summarised in
Table 4 adhere to technical standards to ensure reliability and comparability across studies. Testing was conducted following ASTM C39/C39M and AS 1012.9 procedures for compressive strength measurement of cylindrical specimens under controlled curing conditions (20 ± 2 °C). Mixes complied with AS 1379 and EN 206-1 for water-to-binder ratios (0.30–0.50) and compaction methods, while LS replacement levels (10–40%) were calculated by mass as partial OPC substitution under ASTM C618 SCM classification. Loading rates of 0.25 ± 0.05 MPa/s were applied per ASTM C39 to capture accurate peak loads without shock loading. UHPC mixtures followed ASTM C1856 protocols, with microstructural validation via mercury intrusion porosimetry and SEM confirming hydration and pore structure development. These standards collectively ensure that the
Table 4 data is technically robust, supporting accurate LS dosage optimisation for performance enhancement.
Table 3.
Compressive strength performance of concrete with 10–40% LS replacement, highlighting peak strength at 20–30% substitution [
20,
22,
24,
26,
29,
33,
36,
37].
Table 3.
Compressive strength performance of concrete with 10–40% LS replacement, highlighting peak strength at 20–30% substitution [
20,
22,
24,
26,
29,
33,
36,
37].
| Study |
Best LS % (Age) |
Compressive Strength |
Compared to Control |
Key Findings |
| [22] |
20–40% (28 d) |
~50 MPa |
+10–20% |
↓ Permeability; no strength gain >20% |
| [24] |
20% (28 d) |
~48 MPa |
~ +5% |
Offset RA loss; >40% LS ↓ strength |
| [33] |
20% (90 d) |
~48 MPa |
+5 – 10% |
Higher modulus; lowest creep & shrinkage |
| [26] |
20% (28 d) |
~45 MPa |
+8% |
Highest flexural (+13%); boost at 100 °C |
| [20] |
40% (90 d) |
58.6 MPa |
+5% vs Ctrl; +65% vs FA |
Better tensile & modulus than FA; >40% LS ↓ strength |
| [29] |
20% (28 d, UHPC) |
134.5 MPa |
+2% |
Denser matrix; internal curing benefits |
| [36] |
20% (28 d, w/ IOTs) |
52 MPa |
15% |
Better ITZ; ↓ CH; ↑ C–S–H |
| [37] |
40%(90-180d) |
~60 MPa |
+18% |
↓ Porosity, VPV, Sorptivity |
Table 4 consolidates compressive strength outcomes reported across several key studies on lithium slag (LS) concrete. In nearly all cases, LS replacement within the 20–30% range proved most effective for enhancing compressive strength at 28 to 90 days. Strength improvements, ranging from 5% to 20% over control mixes—are consistently attributed to LS’s pozzolanic reactivity, microstructural densification, and the promotion of extended hydration kinetics. These strength gains are often accompanied by reduced porosity and improved pore size distribution, which enhance both early and long-term structural integrity. Additionally, LS’s reactive silica contributes to the formation of secondary C–S–H gels, which improve the paste–aggregate bond and delay strength regression at later ages. The uniform dispersion of fine LS particles also contributes to particle packing and filler effects, further strengthening the hardened matrix. Such multifaceted mechanisms reflect LS’s dual role as both a reactive binder and a micro-filler, particularly when used at optimized replacement levels.
Notably, a 40% LS replacement level not only outperformed the control mix but also surpassed the compressive strength of equivalent fly ash blends, underscoring LS’s potential for superior long-term performance [
20]. In the context of ultra-high-performance concrete (UHPC), the incorporation of 20% LS was shown to enhance internal curing and promote advanced hydration kinetics, resulting in exceptional mechanical properties [
29]. Similarly, LS has demonstrated its capacity to mitigate strength limitations in recycled aggregate concrete [
24] and ternary SCM systems incorporating iron ore tailings and phosphate slag [
36].
However, most studies also observed that LS replacement levels exceeding 40% tend to reduce strength performance, likely due to the dilution of cementitious components and a lower availability of reactive calcium silicates. Collectively, these findings affirm the mechanical viability of LS as a sustainable supplementary cementitious material, provided that the replacement dosage is optimised to balance pozzolanic activity, binder efficiency, and long-term performance.
2.3.2. Tensile and Flexural Strength
The tensile splitting and flexural strengths of lithium slag (LS) concrete generally exhibit trends parallel to those of compressive strength. When compressive strength is maintained or enhanced through LS incorporation, corresponding improvements in tensile and flexural strength are typically observed. For example, Rahman et al. [
20] reported a 90-day splitting tensile strength of 4.10 MPa for a concrete mix containing 40% LS, compared to 3.0 MPa for a similar mix incorporating 40% fly ash (FA). This tensile strength corresponded to approximately 10% of the mix’s compressive strength—an expected ratio for well-designed concrete—indicating that LS substitution does not compromise tensile performance or increase brittleness. Another study was conducted [
38] to explore the stress-strain behaviour of concrete combined with steel fiber (SF) and LS, and observed the LS improve the tensile performance of the concrete better than that of steel fiber along. Increased tensile strength is particularly important in controlling crack initiation and propagation under service loads. Flexural testing has shown that LS contributes to improved load distribution and reduced stress concentrations at critical points. These enhancements are beneficial in applications such as pavements, slabs, and structural elements where flexural and tensile demands are prominent.
Table 5 illustrates the summary of tensile strength performance of LS blended concrete.
Optimal LS replacements (~20%) typically yield a 5–10% increase in splitting tensile strength while preserving the tensile-to-compressive strength ratio (~10%) expected in quality concrete. Excessive LS (>30%) may lead to plateau or slight reductions, confirming ~20% as optimal for enhancing crack resistance and microstructural densification.
When considering the previous studies, the flexural strength performance as illustrated in
Table 6 shows a similar trend. An 8.33% increase in flexural strength was observed at 20% LS replacement under ambient curing conditions [
26]. Additionally, LS-blended concrete exhibited superior residual flexural strength following high-temperature exposure. For instance, a mix containing 10% LS retained approximately 24% more flexural strength than the control after thermal loading [
39]. Further, research was conducted by [
40] to investigate the relationship of stress-strain of LS with rubber concrete, revealing that 20% of LS enhanced the compressive strength by 21.57%, elastic modulus by 6.92% and peak strain by 17.26% the properties directly combined with an increase of flexural capacity of the concrete.
LS at ~20% generally increases flexural strength by 5–10% over control mixes, enhancing performance under thermal loading and in modified aggregate systems while supporting microstructural integrity.
These findings highlight LS’s role not only in enhancing baseline flexural performance but also in contributing to improved thermal resistance and long-term durability. Such enhancements are attributed to refined microstructure, increased C–S–H gel formation, and improved interfacial bonding at the paste–aggregate transition zone. Moreover, LS-modified mixes demonstrate reduced crack width and enhanced post-peak toughness, particularly under flexural stress. These mechanical benefits, when combined with improved thermal stability, position LS as a multifunctional SCM suitable for high-performance and resilient infrastructure applications. To consolidate the findings,
Table 7 summarises tensile and flexural strength trends of LS-blended concrete relatives to control mixes.
The summary indicates that ~20% LS replacement consistently provides the best tensile and flexural gains, with higher dosages leading to plateau or slight declines due to binder dilution while maintaining balanced mechanical property ratios.
Furthermore, the static elastic modulus increased with LS content up to 20%, with the 20% LS mix exhibiting the highest stiffness among all tested specimens [
33]. This improvement is linked to microstructural densification driven by sustained pozzolanic activity, which reduces internal porosity and mitigates microcrack propagation under load. Overall, moderate LS incorporation significantly enhances tensile and flexural performance, as well as elastic stiffness, thereby reinforcing its potential as a multifunctional supplementary cementitious material (SCM) for durable and high-performance concrete applications.
2.3.3. Creep and Shrinkage
Lithium slag (LS) reduces creep and shrinkage, thereby improving the long-term dimensional stability of concrete. A 20% LS replacement was found to yield the lowest drying shrinkage and specific creep strain at 90 days, outperforming ordinary Portland cement (OPC) mixes in deformation control [
33]. These improvements are attributed to reduced porosity and enhanced matrix density, as discussed in
Section 2.4.1 on permeability. The denser microstructure also promotes uniform internal stress distribution, which minimises strain concentration and microcrack development under sustained loads.
Table 8 summarises the effects of LS on drying shrinkage and creep performance in concrete systems. The investigation [
36] reported that the lower calcium hydroxide (CH) content in LS-blended systems may reduce internal microcracking, a primary contributor to creep deformation. This is consistent with findings that pozzolanic reaction-driven microstructural densification limits time-dependent strain under sustained loading [
33]
The study [
20] observed that 40% LS concrete exceeded the 28-day compressive strength predicted by standard models such as ACI and AS 3600, suggesting that current design codes may overestimate creep in LS concretes due to unaccounted stiffness gains and pozzolanic activity. Although explicit creep coefficients were not provided, the authors of [
33] documented a 20–30% reduction in creep strain in concrete with 20% LS, reinforcing its benefit in minimizing delayed deformation.
An LS replacement of ~20% significantly reduces shrinkage and creep (by 10–30%), improving dimensional stability and long-term durability in sustainable concrete.
At optimal replacement levels (typically 20% for early strength and up to 30–40% for long-term performance), LS enhances structural stability while maintaining mechanical integrity. Unlike many Class F fly ashes that compromise early-age strength, LS improves both early and late-age compressive, tensile, and flexural properties [
20,
26].
However, at high LS contents (>50%), dilution of cementitious phases outweighs pozzolanic benefits, leading to an observed 15–20% drop in compressive strength compared to control mixes [
20]. Thus, mix designs must balance sustainability with performance to ensure optimal mechanical behavior. This trade-off underscores the importance of identifying the threshold beyond which LS addition becomes detrimental to mechanical and durability performance.