Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1456600 Cement and Concrete Research 2012 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

The chemical evolution of two hydrated “low pH” binders prepared from binary (60% Portland cement + 40% silica fume) or ternary (37.5% Portland cement + 32.5% silica fume + 30% fly-ash) mixtures was characterized over one year at 20 °C, 50 °C, and 80 °C. The main hydrates were Al-substituted C–S–H. Raising the temperature from 20 to 80 °C caused a lengthening and cross-linking of their silicate chains. Ettringite that formed in pastes stored at 20 °C was destabilized. Only traces of calcium sulfate (gypsum and/or anhydrite) reprecipitated after one year in some materials cured at 50 °C and 80 °C. The sulfates released were therefore partially adsorbed on the C–A–S–H and dissolved in the pore solution. The pore solution pH dropped by about 2 units as the temperature increased. Conversely, the soluble alkali fractions did not change significantly. Only the ternary binder resulted in a pore solution pH below 11 at the three temperatures studied.

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