Title: NANOSCALE MEASUREMENTS OF CEMENT HYDRATION DURING THE INDUCTION PERIOD
1NANOSCALE MEASUREMENTS OF CEMENT HYDRATION DURING
THE INDUCTION PERIOD
- Jeffrey S. SchweitzerDepartment of Physics
- University of Connecticut
- Storrs, Ct, USA
- 2nd International Symposium on Nanotechnology in
Construction - Bilbao, Spain November 2005
2Collaborators
- Richard A. Livingston, FHWA
- Claus Rolfs, Hans-Werner Becker, Ruhr Universität
Bochum, Germany - Stefan Kubsky, Synchrotron SOLEIL, Saint-Aubin,
Gif-sur-Yvette CEDEX, France - Timothy Spillane, University of Connecticut
- Marta Castellote Armero, Paloma G. de Viedma,
IETcc (CSIC), Madrid, Spain - Walairat Bumrongjaroen (University of Hawaii)
- Supaluck Swatekititham (Chulalongkorn University)
3Study of the Induction Period
- The details of the kinetics of the cement curing
reactions are not known - The reactions appear to be initiated at the grain
surfaces - Hydrogen plays a key role in the reaction process
- Studying the change in hydrogen concentration as
a function of depth and time will provide insight
into the reactions
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5Nuclear Resonant Reaction Analysis (NRRA)
- Use of a narrow resonance ( 1 keV) permits good
spatial resolution - Use of inverse kinematics (a 15N beam) provide
large dE/dx, which improves spatial resolution - A well isolated resonance provides the ability to
have deep probing of the sample ( 2-3 microns) - All of these are provided by the 6.4 MeV
- 15N(p,ag)12C reaction
6Resonance cross section
1H(15N,ag)12C
Energy (MeV)
7Resonant Reaction Depth Profiling
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9Pellet Preparation
- Pure triclinic C3S powder
- Pressed into 13 mm dia. ring molds
- Fired at 1600 ºC to fuse upper surface
- Epoxied to stainless steel backing or with no
backing - Stored under nitrogen until used
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11Sample Preparation
- Saturated Ca(OH)2 Solution ( pH12.5)
- Isothermal (10, 20 or 30 C )
- N2 Purge of solution
- Specimens removed sequentially at
- specified times
- Hydration stopped using methanol rinse
- Specimens dried to 10-6 Torr vacuum
12Typical Experimental Plan
- Temperature Number of Pellets Time
Span oC Hrs - 10 10 21
- 20 4 5.5
- 30 10 2.5
13Measurements
- Typical scan takes about one hour
- Chamber vacuum lt 10-6
- Use of two beam charge states to cover complete
energy range to 11 MeV - Only background in gamma-ray spectrum is from
cosmic rays - Beam-line cold trap minimizes carbon buildup
14Beam Energy Resolution
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16Time Progression
17Typical Scan at Early Times
18C3S at 30 oC
19Temperature Dependence of Induction Time
20Hydrogen Profile Pre-breakdown
21Hydrogen Profile Post-breakdown
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23H Concentration with Retarder and Accelerator
24Comparison of Profiles
25Comparison with Belite
26Time Dependence of Belite Hydration Profiles
27Highly Accelerated
28Lightly Accelerated
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30Ternary Diagram of Glass Composition
31Glass Hydration Procedure
- Saturated Li(OH)2 Solution ( pH12)
- N2 purge to prevent carbonation
- Specimens removed at 72 hours
- Hydration stopped using methanol rinse
- Specimens dried in 10-6 Torr vacuum
32NRRA Results of FF Series
33NRRA Results of Low-Ca CF
34NRRA Results of High-Ca CF
35Future Research
- Effects of Al2O3, Fe2O3 in alite
- Effect of time-varying solution chemistry
- Effects of accelerators retarders
- Relationship between surface layers and time of
- initial set
- Effects of cement storage conditions, i.e.
dusting
36Conclusions
- NRRA is a powerful technique for understanding
cement hydration and it can determine induction
period with a precision of ? 4 minutes or ? 2
- Spatial resolution on the order of 2-3 nm can be
achieved - A surface layer is formed during the induction
period for C3S but not for C2S - Induction period determined by mechanical
breakdown of surface layer 10-20 nm thick. - Hydration involves concentration-dependent
diffusion process - Further work is needed to determine the affects
of accelerators and especially of retarders, and
to understand hydration of other cement components