Effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°C
The cement industry is keen on reducing natural resource consumption, reusing waste that would otherwise be sent to a rubbish tip and lowering its CO2 emissions. In pursuit of those objectives, the addition of materials such as silica fume, ceramic waste, rice husk and precipitated or colloidal nan...
Main Authors: | , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
EDP Sciences
2014-04-01
|
Series: | MATEC Web of Conferences |
Online Access: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20141101006 |
id |
doaj-585a5af00f484b3f9cc39b266291af6d |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-585a5af00f484b3f9cc39b266291af6d2021-02-02T06:11:29ZengEDP SciencesMATEC Web of Conferences2261-236X2014-04-01110100610.1051/matecconf/20141101006matecconf_cmss2013_01006Effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°CSáez del Bosque I.F.0Martínez-Ramírez S.Martín-Pastor M.1Teresa Blanco-Varela M.Instituto de Ciencias de la Construcción Eduardo Torroja (IETCC-CSIC), Department of Cements and Recycling MaterialsUnidad de Resonancia Magnética, RIAIDT, edif. CACTUS, USC The cement industry is keen on reducing natural resource consumption, reusing waste that would otherwise be sent to a rubbish tip and lowering its CO2 emissions. In pursuit of those objectives, the addition of materials such as silica fume, ceramic waste, rice husk and precipitated or colloidal nanosilica, in the various stages of cement manufacture has become increasingly common. That practice inspired the present study (using isothermal conduction calorimetry, 29Si and 27Al MAS NMR, XRD and DTA/TG) of the effect of precipitated amorphous nanosilica (10 wt%) on white portland cement (WPC) hydration. The isothermal conduction calorimetry findings, which were consistent with the NMR and DTA/TG results, showed that adding amorphous nanosilica altered reaction kinetics, expediting alite and belite hydration. The addition also intensified the heat flow attributed to alumina phase hydration and brought the respective peak forward. Although no general consensus has been reached in the literature on the attribution of the third peak appearing on the calorimetric curve for WPC, based on the present findings, the main aluminate hydrate product is monosulfoaluminate. Furthermore, a pre-peak inflection point on the profile of the first exothermal peak on the WPC calorimetric curve was interpreted as the beginning of the pozzolanic reaction, which accelerates alite hydration, consuming portlandite and raising the heat released. C-S-H gel nanostructure was also modified. The results revealed a linear relationship in both the blended and the pure cement pastes between the degree of hydration and the number of Q1 and Q2 units in the gel. The presence of Q2 units was much greater and of Q1 units slightly lower in the former than in the latter. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20141101006 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Sáez del Bosque I.F. Martínez-Ramírez S. Martín-Pastor M. Teresa Blanco-Varela M. |
spellingShingle |
Sáez del Bosque I.F. Martínez-Ramírez S. Martín-Pastor M. Teresa Blanco-Varela M. Effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°C MATEC Web of Conferences |
author_facet |
Sáez del Bosque I.F. Martínez-Ramírez S. Martín-Pastor M. Teresa Blanco-Varela M. |
author_sort |
Sáez del Bosque I.F. |
title |
Effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°C |
title_short |
Effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°C |
title_full |
Effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°C |
title_fullStr |
Effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°C |
title_full_unstemmed |
Effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°C |
title_sort |
effect of the addition of nanosilica on white cement hydration at 25°c |
publisher |
EDP Sciences |
series |
MATEC Web of Conferences |
issn |
2261-236X |
publishDate |
2014-04-01 |
description |
The cement industry is keen on reducing natural resource consumption, reusing waste that would otherwise be sent to a rubbish tip and lowering its CO2 emissions. In pursuit of those objectives, the addition of materials such as silica fume, ceramic waste, rice husk and precipitated or colloidal nanosilica, in the various stages of cement manufacture has become increasingly common. That practice inspired the present study (using isothermal conduction calorimetry, 29Si and 27Al MAS NMR, XRD and DTA/TG) of the effect of precipitated amorphous nanosilica (10 wt%) on white portland cement (WPC) hydration. The isothermal conduction calorimetry findings, which were consistent with the NMR and DTA/TG results, showed that adding amorphous nanosilica altered reaction kinetics, expediting alite and belite hydration. The addition also intensified the heat flow attributed to alumina phase hydration and brought the respective peak forward. Although no general consensus has been reached in the literature on the attribution of the third peak appearing on the calorimetric curve for WPC, based on the present findings, the main aluminate hydrate product is monosulfoaluminate. Furthermore, a pre-peak inflection point on the profile of the first exothermal peak on the WPC calorimetric curve was interpreted as the beginning of the pozzolanic reaction, which accelerates alite hydration, consuming portlandite and raising the heat released. C-S-H gel nanostructure was also modified. The results revealed a linear relationship in both the blended and the pure cement pastes between the degree of hydration and the number of Q1 and Q2 units in the gel. The presence of Q2 units was much greater and of Q1 units slightly lower in the former than in the latter.
|
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20141101006 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT saezdelbosqueif effectoftheadditionofnanosilicaonwhitecementhydrationat25c AT martinezramirezs effectoftheadditionofnanosilicaonwhitecementhydrationat25c AT martinpastorm effectoftheadditionofnanosilicaonwhitecementhydrationat25c AT teresablancovarelam effectoftheadditionofnanosilicaonwhitecementhydrationat25c |
_version_ |
1724301840274685952 |