Improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement

Reactive MgO cement (RMC) formulations had garnered interests as a replacement to Portland Cement, for its low energy consumption during its production and CO2 sequestration abilities. However, mechanical strength advancement of RMC concrete is limited by the low hydration and carbonation of MgO in...

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Main Author: Tye, Wenkai
Other Authors: Cise Unluer
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/75302
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-753022023-03-03T16:54:22Z Improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement Tye, Wenkai Cise Unluer School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Nguyen Tien Dung DRNTU::Engineering Reactive MgO cement (RMC) formulations had garnered interests as a replacement to Portland Cement, for its low energy consumption during its production and CO2 sequestration abilities. However, mechanical strength advancement of RMC concrete is limited by the low hydration and carbonation of MgO in ambient conditions. Some past studies had presented the effectiveness of using hydrating agents (HA) to improve hydration of MgO while others improved the carbonation aspect via various methods. This study aims to improve hydration and carbonation of RMC concrete simultaneously by combining the use of hydrating agents and enhanced curing techniques. In the first half of the study, the effectiveness of different HAs used were evaluated using isothermal calorimetry, compressive strength test, XRD, TGA and SEM. Magnesium acetate proved to be the most effective by gaining ~80 MPa of compressive strength after 56 days, which was 135% higher than the control mix. It also improved the morphology of the HMCs formed when compared to other mixes. It was then used in the second half of the study, where samples were treated with sodium bicarbonate, high initial curing temperature or by introduction of nano-silica as seeds. Only seeding using nano-silica improved the compressive strength of concrete when compared to the control mix (without use of enhanced curing techniques). It recorded a 12.5% improvement over the control mix after 14 days of curing. Moreover, dense interconnections of HMCs were observed. Bachelor of Engineering (Civil) 2018-05-30T08:16:49Z 2018-05-30T08:16:49Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/75302 en Nanyang Technological University 59 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering
Tye, Wenkai
Improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement
description Reactive MgO cement (RMC) formulations had garnered interests as a replacement to Portland Cement, for its low energy consumption during its production and CO2 sequestration abilities. However, mechanical strength advancement of RMC concrete is limited by the low hydration and carbonation of MgO in ambient conditions. Some past studies had presented the effectiveness of using hydrating agents (HA) to improve hydration of MgO while others improved the carbonation aspect via various methods. This study aims to improve hydration and carbonation of RMC concrete simultaneously by combining the use of hydrating agents and enhanced curing techniques. In the first half of the study, the effectiveness of different HAs used were evaluated using isothermal calorimetry, compressive strength test, XRD, TGA and SEM. Magnesium acetate proved to be the most effective by gaining ~80 MPa of compressive strength after 56 days, which was 135% higher than the control mix. It also improved the morphology of the HMCs formed when compared to other mixes. It was then used in the second half of the study, where samples were treated with sodium bicarbonate, high initial curing temperature or by introduction of nano-silica as seeds. Only seeding using nano-silica improved the compressive strength of concrete when compared to the control mix (without use of enhanced curing techniques). It recorded a 12.5% improvement over the control mix after 14 days of curing. Moreover, dense interconnections of HMCs were observed.
author2 Cise Unluer
author_facet Cise Unluer
Tye, Wenkai
format Final Year Project
author Tye, Wenkai
author_sort Tye, Wenkai
title Improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement
title_short Improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement
title_full Improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement
title_fullStr Improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement
title_full_unstemmed Improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement
title_sort improving hydration and carbonation of reactive magnesium oxide cement
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/75302
_version_ 1759857884999450624