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Determination of atomistic deformation of tricalcium silicate paste with high-volume fly ash
Authors:Hyeonseok Jee  Sumin Im  Manabu Kanematsu  Hiroshi Suzuki  Satoshi Morooka  Koyama Taku  Akihiko Machida  Sungchul Bae
Affiliation:1. Department of Architectural Engineering, Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea;2. Department of Architecture and Building Engineering, Faculty of Science and Technology, Tokyo University of Science, Chiba, Japan;3. Materials Science Research Center, Japan Atomic Energy Agency, Tokai, Japan;4. Synchrotron Radiation Research Center, National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology, Hyogo, Japan
Abstract:We examined the effect of incorporating high-volume fly ash on the atomic arrangement and interatomic deformation behavior of calcium silicate hydrates in tricalcium silicate paste upon exposure to external forces. The interatomic structural changes and strains under compressive load were assessed using synchrotron in situ high-energy X-ray scattering-based atomic pair distribution function analysis. Three different types of strains, which were (a) macroscopic strains from gauges on the surfaces of specimen, (b) strains in a reciprocal space (Bragg peak shift), and (c) strains in real space (PDF peak shift), were compared to each other. All monitored and calculated strains for tricalcium silicate-fly ash (50 wt% fly ash) paste were compared with the counterparts of the pure tricalcium silicate paste. Pair distribution function analysis in the range of r < 10 Å indicated that the atomic arrangement of tricalcium silicate-fly ash was similar to that of synthetic calcium silicate hydrates followed by that of pure tricalcium silicate paste. Moreover, the pair distribution function refinement results revealed that the calcium silicate hydrate structure in tricalcium silicate-fly ash paste was similar to tobermorite 11 Å, unlike that in pure tricalcium silicate paste. The interatomic strain of tricalcium silicate-fly ash in the real space (r < 20 Å) was smaller than that of tricalcium silicate under compression, which suggested that the incompressibility of calcium silicate hydrates at atomistic scale was enhanced by the incorporation of fly ash into it. This was likely to be caused by the increased silicate polymerization of calcium silicate hydrates, which was attributed to the increase in the amount of silicate in their structure via the addition of fly ash.
Keywords:calcium silicate hydrate  deformation  fly ash  pair distribution function  X-ray scattering
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