Hoang
Nguyen
* and
Paivo
Kinnunen
Fibre and Particle Engineering Research Unit, University of Oulu, Pentti Kaiteran katu 1, 90014 Oulu, Finland. E-mail: Hoang.Nguyen@oulu.fi; Paivo.Kinnunen@oulu.fi
First published on 24th May 2024
The cement industry needs radical solutions to reduce its carbon emissions. Here, we look at the fundamental question about the cohesion of cement, and give our perspectives on an overlooked factor: the amorphicity of cement reaction products. We discuss how the amorphicity can enable a scientifically-guided strategy to design and realize novel cements. Through this work, we invite the research community and cement scientists to unveil common principle(s) behind the cohesion of not only conventional Portland cement but also other emerging low-carbon cements. By adding this factor to the design framework for cement, we may radically enhance the progress of decarbonizing the industry while using less but achieving more in producing cements and concretes.
To produce a concrete, cement acts as a “glue” phase to bind aggregates of different sizes, thus giving strength to the concrete once it is hardened. When zooming in on the process, Portland cement hydration consists of the hydration of different clinker phases including alite (C3S—Ca3SiO5) and belite (β-C2S—Ca2SiO4), leading to the formation of calcium silicate hydrate (CSH).3 CSH is a nanocrystalline phase (Fig. 1) with variable compositions including different Ca/Si ratios and alkali/aluminate uptakes. The formation and growth of this nanocrystalline phase drives the strength development of the concrete structure. Through the lens of micromechanics with the gel–space ratio4 (i.e., the ratio of the volume of hydrates to the volume of both hydrates and capillary pores), cement paste is a composite of a matric of CSH with cement clinkers as reinforcements.
Fig. 1 (A) The amorphicity of binding phases compared to their crystalline counterparts: C(A)SH in Portland cement and alkali activated cement vs. tobermorite;5 MSH6 in magnesium silicate cement vs. lizardite.7 We show here one example [unpublished data] where we steered the hydration of MgO to form low-crystalline brucite using acetate ligands, which in turn provide promising mechanical strength compared to crystalline brucite. This distorted brucite shared similar characteristics with the hydrous carbonate-containing brucite as found in magnesium carbonate cement. (B) The common range of strength and its development in several major and emerging cements where the dots represent the expected strength in Portland cements as regulated in EN 197 standards. In contrast, the crystalline counterparts do not show such strength development. |
Sharing similar principles with Portland cement, emerging and alternative low-carbon cements have been reported and their mechanical performance is often based on nanocrystalline/amorphous phases as well (Fig. 1). However, little is known about the cohesion in alternative cements and it remains unclear what are the driving forces of cohesiveness in these cements. In addition, although the literature about cohesion in Portland cement is rather comprehensive, the nature of cohesiveness of CSH is still a matter of debate (detailed in the next session). Therefore, motivated by the need to design better cements it has been attracting our interests to address the fundamental question: “What makes cements bind?”. Ideally, we would hope to discover common principle(s) of cohesion behind emerging cements and conventional Portland cement. By better understanding factors that lead to cement cohesiveness, one can design cements in which increased performance can be achieved while using less resources and with lower carbon footprint.
Here, we give our perspective about an overlooked factor in cement that can be used as a predictor of cohesion potential of cement—lack of long-range order or in a word ‘amorphicity’ of the reaction products. We make the case for it to be a powerful predictor for cement performance that can be used to design novel cement chemistries. We also provide our perspective of how it enables a scientifically-guided strategy to be able to use less but achieve more in producing concrete.
Fig. 2 Schematic picture of the nanoscale structure of the CSH gel (center). In the top-left and -right, the magnifications show two possible interparticle interfaces: a loose (left) and tight (right) contact. The close contact among CSH particles contributed to the strength of the CSH pellet as seen in the developed case in ref. 8 (reproduced from ref. 8 and 9 with permission from Elsevier, copyright 2022). |
More recently, Goyal et al. found that during the formation of CSH, ions and water get progressively confined between increasingly charged surfaces of cement hydrates (Fig. 3).11 This leads to a change in ion-water interlocked structures and their stability, which in turn, alters the net pressure between CSH surfaces as hydration proceeds. The change in nanoscale interactions, characterized by competing attraction and repulsion, and the enhanced attraction strength with increasing surface charge density during hydration, play a significant role in shaping the morphology of mesoscale structures forming the gel network. This builds the gel network and can markedly steer compressive or tensile stresses along with the progression of the hydration via densification and solidification.
Fig. 3 (A) The xy pair correlation g(r) between ions indicates that as the surface charge densities σ increase at fixed separation D = 8 Å, ions become closer together and their positions become more correlated. (B) Intermediate scattering functions Fs(qz, t) for the ions measured for the same σ values as in (A) and for two different surface separations D = 10 and 40 Å. Here, the stronger spatial correlations with increasing surface charge density in (A) correspond to increasingly correlated dynamics and more strongly localized ions. (C) The increasing correlations drive the overall pressure between the confining walls to become increasingly attractive, reaching Pmin ≃ −6 GPa at σ = 3 e− nm−2 (reproduced from ref. 11 with permission from AAAS, copyright 2021). |
In alkali-activated cement, an amorphous Al-tobermorite-like gel accounts for the strength. Notably, the CASH gel formed in this class of cement differs from the CSH produced by Portland cement hydration. This is mainly attributed to the low Ca/Si ratio and high Al content of the gel produced by alkali activation of blast furnace slag, which opens up the possibility of cross-linking between the dreierketten chains of the tobermorite-like gel.18 When the system is short in Ca, NASH gel may form after the alkali activation and is often called geopolymer.19 The NASH gel is considered to have an X-ray amorphous zeolite structure.19
Other emerging low-carbon cements share similar nature in terms of amorphicity of the binding phases. Magnesia-based cements offer a conceivable solution to decarbonize the cement industry due to their potential for low-to-negative CO2 emissions.20 The two major MgO-based cements include magnesium silicate and magnesium carbonate cement. The former binds based on magnesium silicate hydrate (MSH)21 while hydrous carbonate-containing brucite22 accounts for the binding in the latter. MSH has an amorphous (nanocrystalline) layered silicate structure with tetrahedral layers as in phyllosilicate minerals.6,23 Therefore, MSH is considered to be a complex composite-like phase consisting of multiple amorphous hydrate magnesium silicate phases24 whereas its crystalline counterparts can be Mg-silicate minerals such as sepiolite and lizardite7 with no binding capacity. As for magnesium carbonate cement, the hydrous carbonate-containing brucite (HCB) is a defective (i.e., amorphous) brucite which results from stacking faults occurring during the hydration of MgO in the presence of (bi)carbonates.25 We also found that stacking faults can also be done in the presence of acetate,26 which strongly influences the binding properties of acetate-modified brucite. While the crystalline brucite shows limited strength-giving performance, this carbonate or acetated-defected amorphous brucite shows comparable binding properties to conventional Portland cement.22,27
In all the five examples (CSH, CASH, NASH, MSH and HCB) we see the same trend: cementitious binding phases are amorphous counterparts of stable non-binding crystalline minerals. One could argue the same is the case also for ettringite-based binders28,29 [with low-crystallinity AFm phases and Al(OH)3] and calcium aluminate cements [with metastable calcium aluminate hydrates and Al(OH)3].30 The fact that all cements share this property seems to indicate that they actually bind due to the amorphicity of their formed phases. In short, implicit in the current paradigm is the assumption that whatever makes cement bind is amorphous in nature. Yet, we have a counterexample to be discussed.
However, when taking a closer look at this system, there are indicators that amorphous magnesium phosphate exist and may play a role as well.32,33 Therefore, it will be important to better understand the reaction mechanism in the magnesium potassium phosphate cement and relationship among phases including the nature of these amorphous phases and whether they contribute to the binding properties. Here, we are open for further discussion on the case of this cement and look forward to more in-depth understanding about their binding phase.
Amorphicity as a concept is also powerful because it bridges into other scientific fields: crystalline materials can be turned amorphous by introducing enough defects, such as stacking faults, or other crystallographic manipulation during the precipitation process. A case in point: in Fig. 1, we show an example of how the introduction of acetate ions can create defects during the formation of brucite, which results in a structure similar to that of carbonate-defective brucite in magnesium carbonate cement and gives the material the ability to bind.
In the effort to decarbonize the cement industry, solutions to reduce the carbon footprint of cement need to be sustainable by design. By adding the amorphicity of cement hydrates into the design framework, we hope to limit the search space through which one may achieve the required mechanical performance while using less resources and still have the right composition of amorphous phases in the end product. To this end, the inter/trans-disciplinary approach in steering the nucleation and growth of cement hydrates is a powerful tool.
We see high potential in designing novel cements with completely distinct chemistries compared to the conventional ones. This may radically enhance the progress of decarbonizing the industry. Several aspects need also considering, such as the long-term performance of these amorphous phases, the degree of binding capability when the composition of the phases varies, and the availability of the feedstock and the ability to upscale for viable cements. Hereby, we invite the research community and cement scientists to join forces and take this framework to develop further the portfolio of sustainable-by-nature cements.
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2024 |