Hydration of the combinations of ground granulated blast furnace slag cements
The heat of hydration is known as a measurement of the initial chemical reactions for the hydration of cement. The heat liberated during the hydration process affects the temperature rise in concrete, which may cause an early-age thermal cracking of a concrete structure. To address this thermal crac...
| Main Authors: | , , |
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
American-Eurasian Network for Scientific Information
2014
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| Online Access: | http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37902/ http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/37902/1/Hydration%20of%20the%20combinations%20of%20ground%20granulated%20blast%20furnace%20slag%20cements.pdf |
| Summary: | The heat of hydration is known as a measurement of the initial chemical reactions for the hydration of cement. The heat liberated during the hydration process affects the temperature rise in concrete, which may cause an early-age thermal cracking of a concrete structure. To address this thermal cracking issue, Portland cement/ground granulated blast furnace slag (PC/GGBS) is often used, due to the low heat hydration properties of GGBS. This paper presents the results of isothermal conduction calorimetry tests performed on GGBS binary cement, Portland cement/ground granulated blast furnace slag (PC/GGBS), GGBS ternary cement, and Portland cement/ground granulated blast furnace slag/metakaolin (PC/GGBS/MK). The tests covered a range of GGBS levels, which are up to 75% GGBS level and up to 15% MK content by mass for the ternary cement combinations. For PC/GGBS cement, the total heat of hydration is lower than that of PC, and an increase in the GGBS levels resulted in a decrease in the amount of heat liberated; however, for PC/GGBS/MK, the heat of hydration generated is lower than that of PC but is greater than those of the equivalent PC/GGBS, which has an equivalent PC content. |
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