Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5437172 | Cement and Concrete Research | 2017 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
A model is developed to explain why the C-S-H phase that grows during the hydration of Portland Cements initially requires a high water content, much of which is lost by gentle drying. It is proposed that the rapid growth of C-S-H during the hydration of alite (C3S) in Portland cements initially occurs by adsorption of fully hydrated aqueous calcium cations onto anhydrous anionic basal sheets of a silicate-deficient (dimeric) tobermorite-like composition. Both divalent (Ca2Â +) and univalent (CaOH+) solvated cations are incorporated to balance the negative charge of the basal sheet, leading to significant structural disorder, explaining the poorly-crystalline nature of the C-S-H formed. Some of the solvation water is lost irreversibly on first drying due to the formation of Si-O-Ca-O-Si bridges, explaining irreversible shrinkage. The initially-formed C-S-H is metastable relative to a form with longer silicate chains, towards which it may slowly evolve with separation of water and CH.
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Authors
Ellis Gartner, Ippei Maruyama, Jeffrey Chen,