Normal and anomalous self-healing mechanism of crystalline calcium silicate hydrates

  • Romain Dupuis
  • , Juhyuk Moon*
  • , Yeonung Jeong
  • , Rae Taylor
  • , Sung Hoon Kang
  • , Hegoi Manzano
  • , Andrés Ayuela
  • , Paulo J.M. Monteiro
  • , Jorge S. Dolado
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The origin of different stability of crystalline calcium silicate hydrates was investigated. The tobermorite crystal has been used as an analog of cement hydrate that is being mostly manufactured material on earth. Normal tobermorite is thermally unstable and transforms to amorphous at low pressure. Meanwhile, anomalous tobermorite with high Al content does not significantly transform under high pressure or high temperature. Conducted X-ray absorption spectroscopy explains the weak stability of normal tobermorite which was originally hypothesized by the role of zeolitic Ca ions in the cavities of silicate chains. Atomic simulations reproduced the experimentally observed trend of pressure behavior once the ideal structures were modified to account for the Al content as well as the chain defects. The simulations also suggested that the stability of tobermorite under stress could be rationalized as a self-healing mechanism in which the structural instabilities were accommodated by a global sliding of the CaO layer.

Original languageEnglish
Article number106356
JournalCement and Concrete Research
Volume142
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Calcium silicate hydrate
  • Cement hydrate
  • Molecular simulation
  • Self-healing mechanism
  • Tobermorite

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