Ceramics-Silikáty 55, (2) 183 - 187 (2011) |
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THE INFLUENCE OF GROUP I METAL CHLORIDES ON WATER LOSS AND CHLORIDE RELEASE FROM MAGNESIUM OXYCHLORIDE CEMENTS |
Cannesson Elodie 1, Manier Suliane 1, Nicholson John W. 2 |
1 Department of Chemistry, IUT Bethune, University of Artois, France
2 Department of Pharmaceutical, Chemical and Environmental Sciences,
University of Greenwich, United Kingdom
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Keywords: Magnesium oxychloride, Alkali metals, Water diffusion, Chloride release |
The water loss and chloride release from four different formulations of magnesium oxychloride cement have been studied.
The formulations were all based on 25% m/m aqueous MgCl₂ and the solutions employed to prepare cements consisted of either MgCl₂:water or MgCl₂:aqueous MCl (M = Li, Na or K, all MCl salts at 1 mol dm⁻³). Solutions were mixed with solid MgO at a ratio of 1:1 (m/v) and allowed to harden at room temperature for 1 hour. Five disc-shaped specimens (6 mm diameter × 2 mm thickness) of each were prepared, stored in a desiccating atmosphere and weighed at regular intervals. All were found to lose water rapidly, equilibrating within three hours. Water loss was Fickian to values of Mt/M∞ of around 0.7 in all cases. Diffusion coefficients were slightly smaller than for the additive-free cement (1.52 × 10⁻⁶ cm²/s) and fell in the range 1.27-1.39 × 10⁻⁶ cm²/s. Equilibrium water losses varied from 23.1% (with NaCl) to 20.0% (with KCl), but only with NaCl did the value differ significantly from that for the additive-free cement (20.7%). Chloride release was increased
by the presence of the additives. It followed a consistent pattern, with a maximum generally at about 5 hours, followed by a reduction up to 2 weeks (336 hours). This shows that a proportion of the released chloride was taken back up as the cement matured. |
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