A colloidal interpretation of chemical aging of the C-S-H gel and its effects on the properties of cement paste |
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Authors: | Jeffrey J Thomas |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Civil Engineering, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60208, United States b Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University, 2145 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, IL 60208, United States |
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Abstract: | The properties, structure, and behavior of cement paste, including surface area, drying shrinkage, creep, and permeability are discussed with the assumption that the C-S-H gel is an aggregation of precipitated, colloidal-sized particles that undergoes chemical aging. A basic thesis of this paper is that C-S-H particles bond together over time, increasing the average degree of polymerization of the silicate chains and causing the C-S-H to become stiffer, stronger, and denser. This process occurs slowly at ambient temperatures, but can be greatly accelerated by elevated temperature curing and is also encouraged by drying, which introduces large local strains that may provide a microstructural basis for creep sites. This chemical aging process of C-S-H can thus affect many of the physical properties of cement paste, and there is particular relevance for the complex shrinkage and creep behavior of this material. The effects of a short heat treatment, which causes rapid aging, depend strongly on the moisture of the paste when it is heated. Many of the observations and insights presented here are not new. The primary objective of this paper is to demonstrate, by reporting a variety of published findings in one place, the significant amount of evidence that has been generated over the past 50 years favoring this interpretation. Another objective is to show that the properties and behavior of the C-S-H gel, and of cement paste, do not require a layered microstructure. Separating chemical aging effects from other changes, such as continued hydration, may well lead to a better understanding of the microstructural causes of creep and shrinkage. |
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Keywords: | C-S-H Microstructure Aging Physical properties Modeling |
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