Abstract

Over the last decade many concrete pavements in North America have begun to show excessive damage at the joints. This damage appears to be due to two primary causes: classic freeze-thaw damage due to local saturation caused by the pooling of water at the joints, and formation of an expansive phase known as calcium oxychloride due to a reaction between chloride-based deicing salts and calcium hydroxide in concrete. This letter explores the formation of calcium oxychloride in cementitious matrices based on constituent materials and mixture compositions. Low temperature differential scanning calorimetry and thermogravimetric analysis were used to quantify the amount of calcium oxychloride and calcium hydroxide, respectively. Thermodynamic modeling was used to predict calcium hydroxide contents from the constituent material compositions. It is shown that calcium oxychloride contents are well correlated with calcium hydroxide contents in cementitious pastes. Supplementary cementitious materials, such as fly ash and slag, can reduce calcium oxychloride formation by reducing the amount of calcium hydroxide. Complexities in the determination of reactivity of supplementary cementitious materials based on their replacement level and different water-to-cement ratios are discussed. Although it is clear that supplementary cementitious materials are beneficial in reducing calcium oxychloride formation, additional analysis tools are needed to more accurately quantify the specific mechanisms (such as dilution, pozzolanic or hydraulic reaction, changes in cement hydration) that result in the beneficial aspects of each supplementary cementitious material.

Highlights

  • Deicing salts are used throughout cold regions in North America to melt ice that forms on the surface of concrete pavements

  • As the w/cm increases the amount of calcium hydroxide (CH) produced by the cement hydration reaction increases

  • In plain cements, the amount of Calcium Hydroxide (CH) and calcium oxychloride (CAOXY) increase with sample aging

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Summary

Introduction

Deicing salts are used throughout cold regions in North America to melt ice that forms on the surface of concrete pavements These salts are typically chloride-based in the form of sodium chloride, calcium chloride, magnesium chloride, or their combinations [1]. Chloride-based deicing salts may interact chemically with concrete This reaction can occur with the hydrated aluminate phases to form Friedel’s or Kuzel’s salts [6, 7] and with calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH) or CH) [8, 9] to produce an expansive salt known as calcium oxychloride (CAOXY).

Methods
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Final thoughts on SCM reactivity and CAOXY reductions
Summary
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