The Hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulation

Blended Portland-blastfumace slag cements provide a suitable matrix for the encapsulation of low and intermediate level waste due to their inherantly low connective porosity and provide a highly alkaline and strongly reduced chemical environment. The hydration mechanism of these materials is complex...

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Main Author: Tyrer, Mark
Published: Aston University 1991
Subjects:
624
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.545147
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5451472017-04-20T03:28:37ZThe Hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulationTyrer, Mark1991Blended Portland-blastfumace slag cements provide a suitable matrix for the encapsulation of low and intermediate level waste due to their inherantly low connective porosity and provide a highly alkaline and strongly reduced chemical environment. The hydration mechanism of these materials is complex and involves several competing chemical reactions. This thesis investigates three main areas: 1) The developing chemical shrinkage of the system shows that the underlying kinetics are dominantly linear and estimates of the activation energy of the slag made by this method and by conduction calorimetry show it to be c.53 kJ/mol. 2) Examination of the soUd phase reveals that caldum hydroxide is initially precipitated and subsequently consumed during hydration. The absolute rate of slag hydration is investigated by chemical and thermal methods and an estimation of the average silicate chain length (3 silicate units) by NMR is presented. 3) The developing pore solution chemistry shows that the system becomes rapidly alkaline (pH 13 - 13.5) and subsequently strongly reduced. Ion chromatography shows the presence of reduced sulphur species which are associated with the onset of reducing conditions. In the above studies, close control of the hydration temperature was maintained and the operation of a temperature controlled pore fluid extration press is reported.624Civil EngineeringAston Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.545147http://publications.aston.ac.uk/14303/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 624
Civil Engineering
spellingShingle 624
Civil Engineering
Tyrer, Mark
The Hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulation
description Blended Portland-blastfumace slag cements provide a suitable matrix for the encapsulation of low and intermediate level waste due to their inherantly low connective porosity and provide a highly alkaline and strongly reduced chemical environment. The hydration mechanism of these materials is complex and involves several competing chemical reactions. This thesis investigates three main areas: 1) The developing chemical shrinkage of the system shows that the underlying kinetics are dominantly linear and estimates of the activation energy of the slag made by this method and by conduction calorimetry show it to be c.53 kJ/mol. 2) Examination of the soUd phase reveals that caldum hydroxide is initially precipitated and subsequently consumed during hydration. The absolute rate of slag hydration is investigated by chemical and thermal methods and an estimation of the average silicate chain length (3 silicate units) by NMR is presented. 3) The developing pore solution chemistry shows that the system becomes rapidly alkaline (pH 13 - 13.5) and subsequently strongly reduced. Ion chromatography shows the presence of reduced sulphur species which are associated with the onset of reducing conditions. In the above studies, close control of the hydration temperature was maintained and the operation of a temperature controlled pore fluid extration press is reported.
author Tyrer, Mark
author_facet Tyrer, Mark
author_sort Tyrer, Mark
title The Hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulation
title_short The Hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulation
title_full The Hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulation
title_fullStr The Hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulation
title_full_unstemmed The Hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulation
title_sort hydration chemistry of blended portland blastfurnace slag cements for radiactive waste encapsulation
publisher Aston University
publishDate 1991
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.545147
work_keys_str_mv AT tyrermark thehydrationchemistryofblendedportlandblastfurnaceslagcementsforradiactivewasteencapsulation
AT tyrermark hydrationchemistryofblendedportlandblastfurnaceslagcementsforradiactivewasteencapsulation
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