To main content

Hydration of Composite Cements Containing Novel SCMs

Abstract

The impact of novel supplementary cementitious materials (SCMs) on the phase assemblage and the pore structure in cement pastes was studied and linked to their impact on the compressive strength in mortar. The composite cements analysed had a composition of 78 wt.% Portland cement, 18 wt.% SCM and 4 wt.% limestone filler, and the samples were cured sealed for 91 days at 20°C. The investigated SCMs comprise natural materials such as clays and volcanic rocks (rhyolite and hyaloclastite), and industrial products such as fly ash, slag, oil shale ash, bio-fuel ash or bio-coal fly ash. The results revealed that all the SCMs except oil shale ash contribute to the phase assemblage in a similar way, when clinker is replaced with 18 wt.% SCM. The pore structure of the different cement pastes was similar. Even when the composite cement pastes showed a higher total intruded pore volume compared to the Portland cement paste sample, these samples showed higher compressive strength. This indicates that total intruded porosity is not the only contribution to strength.
Read the publication

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Community / Architecture, Materials and Structures
  • Heidelberg Materials
  • Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  • Heidelberg Materials Sement Norge AS

Year

2024

Published in

Nordic Concrete Research

ISSN

0800-6377

Volume

70

Issue

1

Page(s)

77 - 97

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository