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Default The Atomic-Level Structure of Cementitious Calcium Silicate Hydrate

From The DNP-NMR Blog:

The Atomic-Level Structure of Cementitious Calcium Silicate Hydrate

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Kumar, A., et al., The Atomic-Level Structure of Cementitious Calcium Silicate Hydrate. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 2017. 121(32): p. 17188-17196.


http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b02439


Efforts to tune the bulk physical properties of concrete are hindered by a lack of knowledge related to the atomic-level structure and growth of calcium silicate hydrate phases, which form about 50–60% by volume of cement paste. Here we describe the first synthesis of compositionally uniform calcium silicate hydrate phases with Ca:Si ratios tunable between 1.0 and 2.0. The calcium silicate hydrate synthesized here does not contain a secondary Ca(OH)2 phase, even in samples with Ca:Si ratios above 1.6, which is unprecedented for synthetic calcium silicate hydrate systems. We then solve the atomic-level three-dimensional structure of these materials using dynamic nuclear polarization enhanced 1H and 29Si nuclear magnetic resonance experiments in combination with atomistic simulations and density functional theory chemical shift calculations. We discover that bridging interlayer calcium ions are the defining structural characteristic of single-phase cementitious calcium silicate hydrate, inducing the strong hydrogen bonding that is responsible for stabilizing the structure at high Ca:Si ratios.
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