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PC Cement Hydration

PC Cement Hydration. Introduction. Portland Cement Concrete Continous binder phase : the cementitious matrix Binder effect on PCC behavior Affects permeability Affects strength Dispersed particulate phase : the aggregates Coarse: #4 to 1½” Fine: #100 to #4

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PC Cement Hydration

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  1. PC Cement Hydration

  2. Introduction • Portland Cement Concrete • Continous binder phase: the cementitious matrix • Binder effect on PCC behavior • Affects permeability • Affects strength • Dispersed particulate phase: the aggregates • Coarse: #4 to 1½” • Fine: #100 to #4 • Aggregates have a major effect on PCC behavior • Serve as a filler • Increase concrete modulus of elasticity

  3. Cementitious Phase } • Portland Cement • Water • Admixtures • Liquid • Mineral Workability & Strength

  4. Cement Manufacture • Quarrying – Raw materials • Crushing • Grinding • Mixing • Calcinated (1100C) • Burned (1450C) • Clinker is produced (10 mm size) • Inter-ground with 5% gypsum (1-100 m) • - most reactive ( <50 m)

  5. Hydration process

  6. Hydration process • Setting – Solidification of the plastic cement paste • Initial set – beginning of solidification – Paste become unworkable – loss in consistency - not < 45 min. • Final set – Time taken to solidify completely – Not > 375min. • Hardening– Strength gain with time – after final set

  7. Hydration - Exothermic Reaction • 2C3S + 11H C3S2H8 + 3CH H = -500 J/g • 2C2S + 9H C3S2H8 + CH H = -250 J/g • Calcium silicates (C3S or C2S) + water • Calcium silicates hydrate (C-S-H) + calcium hydroxide • Amount of CH depends on proportion of C3S and C2S • CSH - amorphous in nature, is an inexact composition, • and is extremely fine (Colloidal).

  8. Tricalcium Aluminate (C3A) C3A + H2O  reacts very fast C3A + H2O + CSH2 (Gypsum)  reacts much slower C3A + 3CSH2 + 26H  C6AS3H32 H = -1350 J/g Tricalcium Aluminate + Gypsum + Water  Ettringite (product #3) Once CSH2 is depleted: C6AS3H32 + 2C3A + 4H  3C4ASH12 Ettringite + Tricalcium Aluminate + Water  Monosulfoaluminate (product #4)

  9. Ferrite Phase: C4AF • Forms same reaction as C3A but to a lesser degree • Uses small amount of gypsum • C4AF + 2CH + 14H  C4(A,F)H13 + (A,F)H3 • Ferrite + Calcium Hydroxide + Water •  Tetracalcium Hydrate + Ferric Aluminum Hydroxide • (product #5) (product #6) • like monosulfoaluminate amorphous

  10. Hydration of Portland cement • Sequence of overlapping chemical reactions • Hydration reactions of individual clinker mineral proceed simultaneously at differing rates and influence each other • A complex dissolution and precipitation process • Leading to continuous cement paste stiffening and hardening

  11. Reaction rate: C3A > C3S > C4AF > C2S

  12. Hydration of Portland cement • Reactivity • Crystal size – Heating rate, burning temp. • Crystal defects vs. impurities • polymorphic form – rate of cooling • Fineness • e.g. C3S and C2S with impurities hydrate faster than their pure forms

  13. Heat of hydration (Cal/g)

  14. Model of CSH

  15. ASTM Types of Portland Cements I II III IV V C3S 50 45 60 25 40 C2S 25 30 15 50 40 C3A 12 7 10 5 4 C4AF 8 12 8 12 10 Gypsum 5 5 5 4 4 Fineness 350 350 450 300 350 (m2/kg) CCS (psi) 1000 900 2000 450 900 Heat of 330 250 500 210 250 Hydration (J/g)

  16. Blended Cements • 20 to 70% of total binding material • Total = Cement & supplementary cementitious material • Most mineral admixtures are industrial by products • Use is economical, ecological, or technical in nature • Fly ash: coal fired power plants • Blast furnace slag: steel production • lower heat, improved durability • Fine pore structure and • lower permeability with same w/c • Improve workability

  17. Pozzolans • 2S + 3CH + 7H  C3S2H8 • First used by Romans • CSH is of lower CaO content • Low heat and slow strength gain • Similar to increase in C2S • Reactivity based on surface area (silica fume) • Some contain alumina (can present durability problems) • Crystalline compounds (quartz); acts to dilutents • Unburned carbon may affect air entrainment • Can have a wide range of composition and reactivity

  18. Blast Furnace Slag • Rapidly cooled slags - to prevent crystallization • (CSA)glass + H  C3(SiA)2H8 (self - reacting) • Forms alumin substituted CSH • Presence of CH accelerated reaction • Mixed with cement

  19. Porosity and pore structure

  20. Capillary pores Gel pores

  21. Pore size distribution 2.5 nm

  22. High strength and low permeability concrete • Low W/C ratio • Proper mixture proportioning • Use of superplasticizers • Use of pozzolans • High degree of hydration • Good curing

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