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Analysis of the Influence and Mechanism of Diatomaceous Earth Internal Curing on the Autogenous Shrinkage and Early Crack Resistance of Cement-Based Materials with Low Water–Binder Ratio

Shuangxi Li, Shunyi Liu, Chunmeng Jiang

2024Applied Sciences10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Diatomaceous earth (DE), a kind of natural and environmentally friendly concrete admixture with good pozzolanic and water absorption properties, is a potential high-quality internal curing material. DE internal curing agent was prepared by calcining excavated diatomaceous earth and applied in cement-based materials with a low water–binder ratio of 0.35 to study its effects on the autogenous shrinkage and early crack resistance of the materials. The results showed that DE was a kind of microfine powder with a unique and orderly microporous structure, and its main component was SiO2, which had good water-holding and -releasing properties. Pre-absorbed DE could effectively improve the internal relative humidity of cement-based materials with a low water–binder ratio. Under the standard of not reducing the 28 d compressive strength of mortar, compared to the benchmark group without DE, when 1% of cement is replaced by DE of equal mass, DE could effectively reduce the 7 d autogenous shrinkage of mortar by about 36.7% and delay the initial cracking time of mortar under the restraint condition of the ring by 10.7%. Therefore, it is an internal curing material with excellent performance.

Topics & Concepts

ShrinkageCuring (chemistry)Materials scienceCementComposite materialWater resistanceGeotechnical engineeringGeologyConcrete and Cement Materials ResearchGrouting, Rheology, and Soil MechanicsConcrete Properties and Behavior
Analysis of the Influence and Mechanism of Diatomaceous Earth Internal Curing on the Autogenous Shrinkage and Early Crack Resistance of Cement-Based Materials with Low Water–Binder Ratio | Litcius