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Portland and Belite Cement Hydration Acceleration by C-S-H Seeds with Variable w/c Ratios

The acceleration of very early age cement hydration by C-S-H seeding is getting attention from scholars and field applications because the enhanced early age features do not compromise later age performances. This acceleration could be beneficial for several low-CO(2) cements as a general drawback i...

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Autores principales: Morales-Cantero, Alejandro, Cuesta, Ana, De la Torre, Angeles G., Mazanec, Oliver, Borralleras, Pere, Weldert, Kai S., Gastaldi, Daniela, Canonico, Fulvio, Aranda, Miguel A. G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9147420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35629580
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15103553
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author Morales-Cantero, Alejandro
Cuesta, Ana
De la Torre, Angeles G.
Mazanec, Oliver
Borralleras, Pere
Weldert, Kai S.
Gastaldi, Daniela
Canonico, Fulvio
Aranda, Miguel A. G.
author_facet Morales-Cantero, Alejandro
Cuesta, Ana
De la Torre, Angeles G.
Mazanec, Oliver
Borralleras, Pere
Weldert, Kai S.
Gastaldi, Daniela
Canonico, Fulvio
Aranda, Miguel A. G.
author_sort Morales-Cantero, Alejandro
collection PubMed
description The acceleration of very early age cement hydration by C-S-H seeding is getting attention from scholars and field applications because the enhanced early age features do not compromise later age performances. This acceleration could be beneficial for several low-CO(2) cements as a general drawback is usually the low very early age mechanical strengths. However, the mechanistic understanding of this acceleration in commercial cements is not complete. Reported here is a contribution to this understanding from the study of the effects of C-S-H gel seeding in one Portland cement and two belite cements at two widely studied water–cement ratios, 0.50 and 0.40. Two commercially available C-S-H nano-seed-based admixtures, i.e., Master X-Seed 130 and Master X-Seed STE-53, were investigated. A multi-technique approach was adopted by employing calorimetry, thermal analysis, powder diffraction (data analysed by the Rietveld method), mercury intrusion porosimetry, and mechanical strength determination. For instance, the compressive strength at 1 day for the PC (w/c = 0.50) sample increased from 15 MPa for the unseeded mortar to 24 and 22 MPs for the mortars seeded with the XS130 and STE53, respectively. The evolution of the amorphous contents was determined by adding an internal standard before recording the powder patterns. In summary, alite and belite phase hydrations, from the crystalline phase content evolutions, are not significantly accelerated by C-S-H seedings at the studied ages of 1 and 28 d for these cements. Conversely, the hydration rates of tetracalcium alumino-ferrate and tricalcium aluminate were significantly enhanced. It is noted that the degrees of reaction of C(4)AF for the PC paste (w/c = 0.40) were 10, 30, and 40% at 1, 7, and 28 days. After C-S-H seeding, the values increased to 20, 45, and 60%, respectively. This resulted in larger ettringite contents at very early ages but not at 28 days. At 28 days of hydration, larger amounts of carbonate-containing AFm-type phases were determined. Finally, and importantly, the admixtures yielded larger amounts of amorphous components in the pastes at later hydration ages. This is justified, in part, by the higher content of amorphous iron siliceous hydrogarnet from the enhanced C(4)AF reactivity.
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spelling pubmed-91474202022-05-29 Portland and Belite Cement Hydration Acceleration by C-S-H Seeds with Variable w/c Ratios Morales-Cantero, Alejandro Cuesta, Ana De la Torre, Angeles G. Mazanec, Oliver Borralleras, Pere Weldert, Kai S. Gastaldi, Daniela Canonico, Fulvio Aranda, Miguel A. G. Materials (Basel) Article The acceleration of very early age cement hydration by C-S-H seeding is getting attention from scholars and field applications because the enhanced early age features do not compromise later age performances. This acceleration could be beneficial for several low-CO(2) cements as a general drawback is usually the low very early age mechanical strengths. However, the mechanistic understanding of this acceleration in commercial cements is not complete. Reported here is a contribution to this understanding from the study of the effects of C-S-H gel seeding in one Portland cement and two belite cements at two widely studied water–cement ratios, 0.50 and 0.40. Two commercially available C-S-H nano-seed-based admixtures, i.e., Master X-Seed 130 and Master X-Seed STE-53, were investigated. A multi-technique approach was adopted by employing calorimetry, thermal analysis, powder diffraction (data analysed by the Rietveld method), mercury intrusion porosimetry, and mechanical strength determination. For instance, the compressive strength at 1 day for the PC (w/c = 0.50) sample increased from 15 MPa for the unseeded mortar to 24 and 22 MPs for the mortars seeded with the XS130 and STE53, respectively. The evolution of the amorphous contents was determined by adding an internal standard before recording the powder patterns. In summary, alite and belite phase hydrations, from the crystalline phase content evolutions, are not significantly accelerated by C-S-H seedings at the studied ages of 1 and 28 d for these cements. Conversely, the hydration rates of tetracalcium alumino-ferrate and tricalcium aluminate were significantly enhanced. It is noted that the degrees of reaction of C(4)AF for the PC paste (w/c = 0.40) were 10, 30, and 40% at 1, 7, and 28 days. After C-S-H seeding, the values increased to 20, 45, and 60%, respectively. This resulted in larger ettringite contents at very early ages but not at 28 days. At 28 days of hydration, larger amounts of carbonate-containing AFm-type phases were determined. Finally, and importantly, the admixtures yielded larger amounts of amorphous components in the pastes at later hydration ages. This is justified, in part, by the higher content of amorphous iron siliceous hydrogarnet from the enhanced C(4)AF reactivity. MDPI 2022-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9147420/ /pubmed/35629580 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15103553 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
Morales-Cantero, Alejandro
Cuesta, Ana
De la Torre, Angeles G.
Mazanec, Oliver
Borralleras, Pere
Weldert, Kai S.
Gastaldi, Daniela
Canonico, Fulvio
Aranda, Miguel A. G.
Portland and Belite Cement Hydration Acceleration by C-S-H Seeds with Variable w/c Ratios
title Portland and Belite Cement Hydration Acceleration by C-S-H Seeds with Variable w/c Ratios
title_full Portland and Belite Cement Hydration Acceleration by C-S-H Seeds with Variable w/c Ratios
title_fullStr Portland and Belite Cement Hydration Acceleration by C-S-H Seeds with Variable w/c Ratios
title_full_unstemmed Portland and Belite Cement Hydration Acceleration by C-S-H Seeds with Variable w/c Ratios
title_short Portland and Belite Cement Hydration Acceleration by C-S-H Seeds with Variable w/c Ratios
title_sort portland and belite cement hydration acceleration by c-s-h seeds with variable w/c ratios
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9147420/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35629580
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15103553
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