Cargando…

Utilization of Calcium Carbide Residue as Solid Alkali for Preparing Fly Ash-Based Geopolymers: Dependence of Compressive Strength and Microstructure on Calcium Carbide Residue, Water Content and Curing Temperature

Calcium carbide residue (CCR) is a solid waste resulting from acetylene gas production. In this study, CCR was used as an alkali activator to prepare fly ash (FA)-based geopolymers without any alkali supplementation. We studied the factors (FA/CCR ratio, curing temperature, and water/binder ratio) i...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wang, Qiang, Guo, Haozhe, Yu, Ting, Yuan, Peng, Deng, Liangliang, Zhang, Baifa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8840007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35160919
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15030973
_version_ 1784650511364915200
author Wang, Qiang
Guo, Haozhe
Yu, Ting
Yuan, Peng
Deng, Liangliang
Zhang, Baifa
author_facet Wang, Qiang
Guo, Haozhe
Yu, Ting
Yuan, Peng
Deng, Liangliang
Zhang, Baifa
author_sort Wang, Qiang
collection PubMed
description Calcium carbide residue (CCR) is a solid waste resulting from acetylene gas production. In this study, CCR was used as an alkali activator to prepare fly ash (FA)-based geopolymers without any alkali supplementation. We studied the factors (FA/CCR ratio, curing temperature, and water/binder ratio) influencing the mechanical property of FA/CCR-based geopolymers. The compressive strength results showed that, by optimizing these three factors, the FA/CCR mixture has great potential for use as a cementitious material and geopolymer with a dense microstructure having a maximal compressive strength of 17.5 MPa. The geopolymers’ chemical structure, microstructure, and chemical composition were characterized and determined by a combination of techniques. All these results revealed that amorphous C-(A)-S-H (calcium (aluminate) silicate hydrate) gels mainly formed after geopolymerization resulting from the reaction of FA and CCR. In addition, some crystallines, such as ettringite and monosulfate, were also formed. Further, geopolymers prepared with a suitable FA/CCR ratio (1:1 or 1:2) possessed a compact microstructure because of their sufficient reactive SiO(2) and Al(2)O(3) and high-enough alkalinity, responsible for higher content of C-(A)-S-H formation and better mechanical property. Too high curing temperature or water content induced the formation of a loosely bound geopolymer matrix that strongly weakens its mechanical property.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8840007
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-88400072022-02-13 Utilization of Calcium Carbide Residue as Solid Alkali for Preparing Fly Ash-Based Geopolymers: Dependence of Compressive Strength and Microstructure on Calcium Carbide Residue, Water Content and Curing Temperature Wang, Qiang Guo, Haozhe Yu, Ting Yuan, Peng Deng, Liangliang Zhang, Baifa Materials (Basel) Article Calcium carbide residue (CCR) is a solid waste resulting from acetylene gas production. In this study, CCR was used as an alkali activator to prepare fly ash (FA)-based geopolymers without any alkali supplementation. We studied the factors (FA/CCR ratio, curing temperature, and water/binder ratio) influencing the mechanical property of FA/CCR-based geopolymers. The compressive strength results showed that, by optimizing these three factors, the FA/CCR mixture has great potential for use as a cementitious material and geopolymer with a dense microstructure having a maximal compressive strength of 17.5 MPa. The geopolymers’ chemical structure, microstructure, and chemical composition were characterized and determined by a combination of techniques. All these results revealed that amorphous C-(A)-S-H (calcium (aluminate) silicate hydrate) gels mainly formed after geopolymerization resulting from the reaction of FA and CCR. In addition, some crystallines, such as ettringite and monosulfate, were also formed. Further, geopolymers prepared with a suitable FA/CCR ratio (1:1 or 1:2) possessed a compact microstructure because of their sufficient reactive SiO(2) and Al(2)O(3) and high-enough alkalinity, responsible for higher content of C-(A)-S-H formation and better mechanical property. Too high curing temperature or water content induced the formation of a loosely bound geopolymer matrix that strongly weakens its mechanical property. MDPI 2022-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8840007/ /pubmed/35160919 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15030973 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wang, Qiang
Guo, Haozhe
Yu, Ting
Yuan, Peng
Deng, Liangliang
Zhang, Baifa
Utilization of Calcium Carbide Residue as Solid Alkali for Preparing Fly Ash-Based Geopolymers: Dependence of Compressive Strength and Microstructure on Calcium Carbide Residue, Water Content and Curing Temperature
title Utilization of Calcium Carbide Residue as Solid Alkali for Preparing Fly Ash-Based Geopolymers: Dependence of Compressive Strength and Microstructure on Calcium Carbide Residue, Water Content and Curing Temperature
title_full Utilization of Calcium Carbide Residue as Solid Alkali for Preparing Fly Ash-Based Geopolymers: Dependence of Compressive Strength and Microstructure on Calcium Carbide Residue, Water Content and Curing Temperature
title_fullStr Utilization of Calcium Carbide Residue as Solid Alkali for Preparing Fly Ash-Based Geopolymers: Dependence of Compressive Strength and Microstructure on Calcium Carbide Residue, Water Content and Curing Temperature
title_full_unstemmed Utilization of Calcium Carbide Residue as Solid Alkali for Preparing Fly Ash-Based Geopolymers: Dependence of Compressive Strength and Microstructure on Calcium Carbide Residue, Water Content and Curing Temperature
title_short Utilization of Calcium Carbide Residue as Solid Alkali for Preparing Fly Ash-Based Geopolymers: Dependence of Compressive Strength and Microstructure on Calcium Carbide Residue, Water Content and Curing Temperature
title_sort utilization of calcium carbide residue as solid alkali for preparing fly ash-based geopolymers: dependence of compressive strength and microstructure on calcium carbide residue, water content and curing temperature
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8840007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35160919
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15030973
work_keys_str_mv AT wangqiang utilizationofcalciumcarbideresidueassolidalkaliforpreparingflyashbasedgeopolymersdependenceofcompressivestrengthandmicrostructureoncalciumcarbideresiduewatercontentandcuringtemperature
AT guohaozhe utilizationofcalciumcarbideresidueassolidalkaliforpreparingflyashbasedgeopolymersdependenceofcompressivestrengthandmicrostructureoncalciumcarbideresiduewatercontentandcuringtemperature
AT yuting utilizationofcalciumcarbideresidueassolidalkaliforpreparingflyashbasedgeopolymersdependenceofcompressivestrengthandmicrostructureoncalciumcarbideresiduewatercontentandcuringtemperature
AT yuanpeng utilizationofcalciumcarbideresidueassolidalkaliforpreparingflyashbasedgeopolymersdependenceofcompressivestrengthandmicrostructureoncalciumcarbideresiduewatercontentandcuringtemperature
AT dengliangliang utilizationofcalciumcarbideresidueassolidalkaliforpreparingflyashbasedgeopolymersdependenceofcompressivestrengthandmicrostructureoncalciumcarbideresiduewatercontentandcuringtemperature
AT zhangbaifa utilizationofcalciumcarbideresidueassolidalkaliforpreparingflyashbasedgeopolymersdependenceofcompressivestrengthandmicrostructureoncalciumcarbideresiduewatercontentandcuringtemperature