Role of Polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development

Polycarboxylate-ether (PCE) superplasticizers are a fundamental constituent of modern cementbased materials due to their impact on the rheology of the fresh mix and mechanical performance of the hardened material. The effect of PCEs on cement hydration kinetics has been known since their introductio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Valentini L., Dalconi M.C., Artioli G.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2018-01-01
Series:MATEC Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201814901004
id doaj-070aae536cdc415680f38c3ee0d67816
record_format Article
spelling doaj-070aae536cdc415680f38c3ee0d678162021-02-02T08:16:25ZengEDP SciencesMATEC Web of Conferences2261-236X2018-01-011490100410.1051/matecconf/201814901004matecconf_cmss2018_01004Role of Polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural developmentValentini L.Dalconi M.C.Artioli G.Polycarboxylate-ether (PCE) superplasticizers are a fundamental constituent of modern cementbased materials due to their impact on the rheology of the fresh mix and mechanical performance of the hardened material. The effect of PCEs on cement hydration kinetics has been known since their introduction in the early 1980s. However, detailed knowledge of the role played by PCE macromolecules on the basic mechanisms of cement hydration (dissolution, diffusion, precipitation) is still lacking. A better understanding of how such mechanisms are influenced by the addition of PCE is no doubt beneficial to the design of novel superplasticizing admixtures. Here, I report on some recent findings about the role of PCE superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development. The interaction between PCE and C3S pastes was investigated by an ad-hoc kinetic model based on a combination of generalized forms of the Avrami and BNG (Boundary Nucleation and Growth) models. The model is used to fit the rate of C-S-H precipitation measured by in-situ X-ray powder diffraction combined with mass balance calculations. The results show that a switch from heterogeneous to homogeneous C-S-H nucleation occurs in the presence of PCEs and that the C-S-H growth rate decreases proportionally to the amount of PCE used. The predicted switch to homogeneous nucleation is in agreement with experimental results obtained by XRD-enhanced micro-tomography imaging, showing that, in the presence of PCE, C-S-H preferentially forms in the pore space rather than at the surface of clinker particles.https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201814901004
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Valentini L.
Dalconi M.C.
Artioli G.
spellingShingle Valentini L.
Dalconi M.C.
Artioli G.
Role of Polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development
MATEC Web of Conferences
author_facet Valentini L.
Dalconi M.C.
Artioli G.
author_sort Valentini L.
title Role of Polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development
title_short Role of Polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development
title_full Role of Polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development
title_fullStr Role of Polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development
title_full_unstemmed Role of Polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development
title_sort role of polycarboxylate-ether superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development
publisher EDP Sciences
series MATEC Web of Conferences
issn 2261-236X
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Polycarboxylate-ether (PCE) superplasticizers are a fundamental constituent of modern cementbased materials due to their impact on the rheology of the fresh mix and mechanical performance of the hardened material. The effect of PCEs on cement hydration kinetics has been known since their introduction in the early 1980s. However, detailed knowledge of the role played by PCE macromolecules on the basic mechanisms of cement hydration (dissolution, diffusion, precipitation) is still lacking. A better understanding of how such mechanisms are influenced by the addition of PCE is no doubt beneficial to the design of novel superplasticizing admixtures. Here, I report on some recent findings about the role of PCE superplasticizers on cement hydration kinetics and microstructural development. The interaction between PCE and C3S pastes was investigated by an ad-hoc kinetic model based on a combination of generalized forms of the Avrami and BNG (Boundary Nucleation and Growth) models. The model is used to fit the rate of C-S-H precipitation measured by in-situ X-ray powder diffraction combined with mass balance calculations. The results show that a switch from heterogeneous to homogeneous C-S-H nucleation occurs in the presence of PCEs and that the C-S-H growth rate decreases proportionally to the amount of PCE used. The predicted switch to homogeneous nucleation is in agreement with experimental results obtained by XRD-enhanced micro-tomography imaging, showing that, in the presence of PCE, C-S-H preferentially forms in the pore space rather than at the surface of clinker particles.
url https://doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/201814901004
work_keys_str_mv AT valentinil roleofpolycarboxylateethersuperplasticizersoncementhydrationkineticsandmicrostructuraldevelopment
AT dalconimc roleofpolycarboxylateethersuperplasticizersoncementhydrationkineticsandmicrostructuraldevelopment
AT artiolig roleofpolycarboxylateethersuperplasticizersoncementhydrationkineticsandmicrostructuraldevelopment
_version_ 1724297436610953216