Abstract

This study investigated the heat-induced acceleration of cement hydration and pozzolanic reaction focusing on mechanical performance and structural modification at the meso- and micro-scale. The pozzolanic reaction was implemented by substituting 20 wt.% of cement with silica fume, considered the typical dosage of silica fume in ultra-high performance concrete. By actively consuming a limited amount of water and outer-formed portlandite on the unreacted cement grains, it was confirmed that high-temperature curing greatly enhances the pozzolanic reaction when compared with cement hydration under the same environment. The rate of strength development from the dual reactions of cement hydration and pozzolanic reaction was increased. After the high-temperature curing, further strength development was negligible because of the limited space availability and preconsumption of water under a low water-to-cement environment. Since the pozzolanic reaction does not directly require the anhydrous cement, the reaction can be more easily accelerated under restrained conditions because it does not heavily rely on the diffusion of the limited amount of water. Therefore, it significantly increases the mean chain length of the C–S–H, the size of C–S–H globules with a higher surface fractal dimension. This finding will be helpful in understanding the complicated hydration mechanism of high-strength concrete or ultra-high performance concrete, which has a very low water-to-cement ratio.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIf a sufficient amount of water is provided, the cement can completely react with the water to form cement hydrates, but if there is not enough water, numerous unhydrated particles remain in the hardened matrix

  • Cement undergoes a hydration reaction with water

  • After 3 days of curing at an ambient temperature, C_3 developed a higher strength than CS_3, indicating that the effect of cement hydration on strength was dominant over the physical filler effect from the silica fume and the strength contribution from the pozzolanic reaction

Read more

Summary

Introduction

If a sufficient amount of water is provided, the cement can completely react with the water to form cement hydrates, but if there is not enough water, numerous unhydrated particles remain in the hardened matrix. The amount of cement hydrates produced is generally related to the total porosity as well as the development of material properties, including the compressive strength. Ultra-high performance concrete (UHPC) has a mixed proportion with a very low water-to-cement (w/c) ratio, coming with a large number of unhydrated cement particles [1,2,3]. UHPC expresses high compressive strength—above 150 MPa—despite the large amount of anhydrous cement particles [1,2,4]. To explain the high strength of UHPC or high-strength concrete in general, various factors, including the degree

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call