Litcius/Paper detail

3D Nanotomography of calcium silicate hydrates by transmission electron microscopy

Panod Viseshchitra, Peter Ercius, Paulo J.M. Monteiro, Mary Scott, Daniela Ushizima, Jiaqi Li, Ke Xu, Hans‐Rudolf Wenk

2020Journal of the American Ceramic Society17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Calcium silicate hydrate (C‐S‐H), is the principal hydration product of Portland cement that mainly contributes to the physical and mechanical properties of concrete. This paper aims to investigate the three‐dimensional structure of C‐S‐H with Ca/Si ratios of 1.0 and 1.6 at the nanoscale using electron tomography. The 3D reconstructions and selected region of interest analysis confirm that the morphology of both C‐S‐H materials are foil‐like structures. The difference between the two materials is the density of elongated structures. C‐S‐H with Ca/Si ratio 1.6 is clearly composed of denser particles compared to the other C‐S‐H material due to overlapping of the foil‐like structure. Pore analysis shows that C‐S‐H 1.0 and C‐S‐H 1.6 have porosities 69.2% and 49.8% respectively. Pore size distribution also reveals that C‐S‐H 1.0 has pore size range between 0‐250 nm and C‐S‐H 1.6 between 0‐100 nm. The pore network's size of C‐S‐H 1.0 is significantly larger than 1.6. This study illustrates the capability of using electron tomography to determine the 3D nanoscale structure of cementitious products and to distinguish between C‐S‐H 1.0 and 1.6.

Topics & Concepts

Calcium silicate hydrateMaterials scienceTransmission electron microscopyFOIL methodNanoscopic scaleCalcium silicateSilicateElectron tomographyMineralogyNanometreRaman spectroscopyCementitiousCrystallographyTobermoriteScanning electron microscopeHydrateAnalytical Chemistry (journal)Chemical engineeringNanotechnologyComposite materialScanning transmission electron microscopyCementChemistryOpticsChromatographyPhysicsEngineeringOrganic chemistryConcrete and Cement Materials ResearchConcrete Corrosion and DurabilityCO2 Sequestration and Geologic Interactions