Panpan Tang, Yangkai Xiong, Lei Huang, Zhiqiang Fang, Hao Jiang, Guoqing Wang
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Properties of tartaric acid modified steel slag as supplementing cementitious materials
By using tartaric acid (TA) as a wet‐method modifier to modify steel slag powder (SS), it is helpful to reduce the content of free calcium oxide (f‐CaO) in SS and further improve the mechanical properties and soundness of SS as supplementing cementitious materials (SCM) in the mortar. The results indicate that with the addition of 2 wt% of TA, the number of large particles bigger than 45 µm in the SS decreased, resulting in predominantly smaller particles smaller than 45 µm. While the specific surface area increased from 417 to 704 m2/kg, the water consumption at standard consistency was significantly reduced. The soundness of the paste SS as SCM had improved including the f‐CaO content decreased from 4.81% to 0.95%, and the Le Chatelier expansion reduced from 4.5 to 1.5 mm. The mechanical properties were significantly enhanced, with the flexural strength increasing from 5.6 to 7.8 MPa, and the compressive strength rising from 38.8 to 52.7 MPa. After 28 days of curing in water, the hydration products of the mortar are hydrated calcium silicate (C‐S‐H), calcium hydroxide (CH), and calcium carbonate (CaCO3).
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Applied Ceramic Technology publishes cutting edge applied research and development work focused on commercialization of engineered ceramics, products and processes. The publication also explores the barriers to commercialization, design and testing, environmental health issues, international standardization activities, databases, and cost models. Designed to get high quality information to end-users quickly, the peer process is led by an editorial board of experts from industry, government, and universities. Each issue focuses on a high-interest, high-impact topic plus includes a range of papers detailing applications of ceramics. Papers on all aspects of applied ceramics are welcome including those in the following areas:
Nanotechnology applications;
Ceramic Armor;
Ceramic and Technology for Energy Applications (e.g., Fuel Cells, Batteries, Solar, Thermoelectric, and HT Superconductors);
Ceramic Matrix Composites;
Functional Materials;
Thermal and Environmental Barrier Coatings;
Bioceramic Applications;
Green Manufacturing;
Ceramic Processing;
Glass Technology;
Fiber optics;
Ceramics in Environmental Applications;
Ceramics in Electronic, Photonic and Magnetic Applications;