Hydration of Secar 71 aluminous cement in presence of granulated blast furnace slag
β Scribed by A.J. Majumdar; R.N. Edmonds; B. Singh
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 339 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-8846
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β¦ Synopsis
The hydration behaviour of a 1:1 mixture (by mass) of 'Secar 71' refractory aluminous cement and ground granulated blast furnace slag has been studied over a range of temperature using conduction calorimetry, x-ray diffraction and thermal analysis techniques.
The initial hydration of the cement produces CAH~ or C2AH6; at higher temperatures this is followed by limited conversion to C3AH~ and reaction with the slag producing gehlenite hydrate.
The start strength of the cement plus slag mixture is considerably lower than that of the cement itself at ambient temperatures but when cured under water the strengths of the two materials become comparable after six months.
When kept in hot water over a long period of time, the 1:1 cement plus slag mixture has not shown any reduction in strength.
A possible explanation for this phenomenon is offered.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Methods for determining the codtent of blast furnace slag (BFS) in blended cements composed of BFS and OPC have been briefly reviewed. A variety of dissolution orocedures were investigated and the results compared critically. Extractions with methanol-salicyclic and/or acetic acid show that these s
## Abstract One method proposed for utilisation of highβmagnesia Portland cements involves the addition of active siliceous admixtures such as fly ash or ground granulated blastfurnace slag. This addition enables otherwise unsound cements to pass the ASTM autoclave test (C151β74a) for expansion of