Publication detail
Blastfurnace Hybrid Cement with Waste Water Glass Activator: Alkali-Silica Reaction Study
KALINA, L. BÍLEK, V. BRADOVÁ, L. TOPOLÁŘ, L.
Original Title
Blastfurnace Hybrid Cement with Waste Water Glass Activator: Alkali-Silica Reaction Study
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
English
Original Abstract
Hybrid systems represent a new sustainable type of cement combining the properties of ordinary Portland cement and alkali-activated materials. In this study, a hybrid system based on blast furnace slag and Portland clinker was investigated. The economic aspects and appropriate waste management resulted in the usage of technological waste from water glass production (WG-waste) as an alkaline activator. Although the Portland clinker content was very low, the incorporation of this by-product significantly improved the mechanical properties. Nevertheless, the high amount of alkalis in combination with possible reactive aggregates raises concerns about the risk of alkali–silica reaction (ASR). The results obtained from expansion measurement, the uranyl acetate fluorescence method, and microstructure characterization revealed that the undesirable effects of alkali–silica reaction in mortars based on the hydration of hybrid cement are minimal.
Keywords
hybrid cement; alkaline activation; blast furnace slag; waste water glass; ordinary Portland cement; alkali–silica reaction; aggregate
Authors
KALINA, L.; BÍLEK, V.; BRADOVÁ, L.; TOPOLÁŘ, L.
Released
17. 8. 2020
Publisher
MDPI
ISBN
1996-1944
Periodical
Materials
Year of study
13
Number
16
State
Swiss Confederation
Pages from
1
Pages to
9
Pages count
9
URL
Full text in the Digital Library
BibTex
@article{BUT164725,
author="Lukáš {Kalina} and Vlastimil {Bílek} and Lada {Bradová} and Libor {Topolář}",
title="Blastfurnace Hybrid Cement with Waste Water Glass Activator: Alkali-Silica Reaction Study",
journal="Materials",
year="2020",
volume="13",
number="16",
pages="1--9",
doi="10.3390/ma13163646",
issn="1996-1944",
url="https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/13/16/3646"
}