Experimental and computational investigation of magnesium phosphate cement mortar

This figure studies the property of the MPC mortar at macro, micro and nano-level. [Display omitted] •Increase of M/P ratio slows down the setting rate for MPC mortar.•Increase of M/P ratio reduces the compressive strength of MKPC.•The MNPC has optimum strength at M/P ratio 9.5.•The properties of MP...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inConstruction & building materials Vol. 112; pp. 331 - 342
Main Authors Hou, Dongshuai, Yan, Handong, Zhang, Jinrui, Wang, Penggang, Li, Zongjin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2016
Elsevier B.V
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Summary:This figure studies the property of the MPC mortar at macro, micro and nano-level. [Display omitted] •Increase of M/P ratio slows down the setting rate for MPC mortar.•Increase of M/P ratio reduces the compressive strength of MKPC.•The MNPC has optimum strength at M/P ratio 9.5.•The properties of MPC are weakened after immersed in water solution.•The unstable H-bonds and KO bonds result in the hydrolytic weakening. For first time, an experimental and computational study has been conducted to investigate the properties of magnesium phosphate cement (MPC) mortar and its main hydration product struvite-K crystal that would account for the mechanical properties of these materials. Two types of MPC mortars, magnesium sodium phosphate cement (MNPC) and magnesium potassium phosphate cement (MKPC), were synthesized with magnesium to phosphate (M/P) ratio from 4 to 18 and water to solid ratio (w/s) from 0.16 to 0.2. Subsequently, the setting behavior, compressive strength and water resistance of MNPC and MKPC were investigated to study the influence of M/P and w/s ratios. An increase of M/P ratio can slow down the setting rate for both MPC mortar, and MNPC shows faster setting performance, as compared with MKPC. With increasing M/P ratio, the mechanical properties of MKPC mortar are gradually weakened, while the strength for MNPC mortar is first improved and then degrades, with the optimum value at M/P ratio of 9.5. Additionally, the saturated MPC mortars, immersed in water solution, are significantly weakened, showing poor water resistance. Micro-characterizations including X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy of the MPC mortar reveal that MKPC mortars have good crystallization of struvite-K, with the morphology of plate packing at early hydration stage and the MNP hydrates show amorphous phase. Furthermore, molecular dynamics was conducted to study the structure, dynamics and mechanical properties of the main hydrated phase in MKPC cement, struvite-K crystal. The hydrolytic weakening effect of water molecules and failure mechanism have been unraveled that the H-bonds and KOs connections lose the chemical stability due to water attacking and tensile loading, which explains the severe failure of MPC mortar observed in the water resistant experiments.
ISSN:0950-0618
1879-0526
DOI:10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2016.02.200