Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1455959 Cement and Concrete Research 2016 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

A better understanding of silica dissolution–precipitation reactions at high pH aqueous solutions allows for promotion of favorable (e.g., pozzolanic) reactions and mitigation of deleterious (e.g., alkali-silica) reactions in concrete. In this paper, the kinetics and products of silica glass dissolution are studied as a function of solution pH, temperature, and availability of calcium. It was observed that dissolution rate versus time increases linearly with pH and reaches a maximum at pH = 14, with slower dissolution at higher alkalinities. In solutions with similarly high pH, but saturated with portlandite, glass dissolution is significantly slower. This is due to formation of a dense, low porosity, and strongly bonded C–S–H layer on the surface of glass, which serves as a barrier against diffusion of OH− and alkali ions towards the substrate glass. This protective layer forms only when Ca is abundant and portlandite saturation can be maintained on a local scale.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
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