ISSN:
1551-2916
Source:
Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
Topics:
Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
,
Physics
Notes:
The mid-, near-, and far-infrared (IR) spectra of synthetic, single-phase calcium silicate hydrates (C-S-H) with Ca/Si ratios (C/S) of 0.41–1.85, 1.4 nm tobermorite, 1.1 nm tobermorite, and jennite confirm the similarity of the structure of these phases and provide important new insight into their H2O and OH environments. The main mid-IR bands occur at 950–1100, 810–830, 660–670, and 440–450 cm−1, consistent with single silicate chain structures. For the C-S-H samples, the mid-IR bands change systematically with increasing C/S ratio, consistent with decreasing silicate polymerization and with an increasing content of jennite-like structural environments of C/S ratios 〉1.2. The 950–1100 cm−1 group of bands due to Si-O stretching shifts first to lower wave number due to decreasing polymerization and then to higher wave numbers, possibly reflecting an increase in jennite-like structural environments. Because IR spectroscopy is a local structural probe, the spatial distribution of the jennite-like domains cannot be determined from these data. A shoulder at ∼1200 cm−1 due to Si-O stretching vibrations in Q3 sites occurs only at C/S lessthan equal to 0.7. The 660–670 cm−1 band due to Si-O-Si bending broadens and decreases in intensity for samples with C/S 〉 0.88, consistent with depolymerization and decreased structural order. In the near-IR region, the combination band at 4567 cm−1 due to Si-OH stretching plus O-H stretching decreases in intensity and is absent at C/S greater than ∼1.2, indicating the absence of Si-OH linkages at C/S ratios greater than this. The primary Si-OH band at 3740 cm-1 decreases in a similar way. In the far-IR region, C-S-H samples with C/S ratio greater than ∼1.3 have increased absorption intensity at ∼300 cm−1, indicating the presence of CaOH environments, even though portlandite cannot be detected by X-ray diffraction for C/S ratios 〈1.5. These results, in combination with our previous NMR and Raman spectroscopic studies of the same samples, provide the basis for a more complete structural model for this type of C-S-H, which is described.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1151-2916.1999.tb01826.x
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