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Competition between Hydration and Carbonation in Hydraulic Lime and Lime-Pozzolana Mortars

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TLDR
A combined reaction of hydration and carbonation takes place in hydraulic lime and lime-pozzolana mortars as discussed by the authors, and the degree and the order of these reactions are strongly influenced by the moisture content.
Abstract
A combined reaction of hydration and carbonation takes place in hydraulic lime and lime-pozzolana mortars. Hydration reactions are the first reaction and carbonation of lime is the complementary reaction in the strength gain. Competition between these two reactions can occur in lime-pozzolana mortars if the pozzolanic material has low reactivity with lime, leading to the consumption of lime by carbonation reaction. The degree and the order of these reactions are strongly influenced by the moisture content. Hydration reactions are enhanced under moist conditions while carbonation is delayed. Curing under dry conditions does not sufficiently increase their strength because the hydration reactions are slowed down or even terminated by the full carbonation of lime in lime-pozzolana mortars. The consequence of this on the mechanical properties of the mortars is remarkable while the same impact is not observed in their porosity. Such mortars require moist conditions to ensure sufficient strength development.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of curing conditions on the properties of lime, lime–metakaolin and lime–zeolite mortars

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of zeolite and metakaolin addition on the compressive strength, porosity, shrinkage, and frost resistance of lime mortars cured at different humidity conditions with or without access of carbon dioxide in a period up to 1 year.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of the setting process and the formulation on the drying of hemp concrete

TL;DR: In this paper, the drying kinetics and the moisture diffusivity and apprehending the hygrothermal behaviour of the material were investigated under natural and forced convection on several instrumented blocks during the curing time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Studying the hardening and mechanical performances of rice husk and hemp-based building materials cured under natural and accelerated carbonation.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the mechanical properties and the lime-based binder hardening of green concretes made of rice husk or hemp hurd, and found that the lime binder was almost hardened in the same way for both concrete with a similar rate of carbonation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Commercial NHL-containing mortars for the preservation of historical architecture. Part 1: Compositional and mechanical characterisation.

TL;DR: In this paper, the characterisation of a selection of NHL-based commercial products for the conservation of historic masonries is presented, focusing on those parameters which can be used as selection criteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compressive strength development of binary and ternary lime–pozzolan mortars

TL;DR: In this article, the compressive strength development of a broad range of hydraulic lime mortars with a range of commercially available alumino-silicate by-products and modern pozzolanic additions was investigated.
References
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2 — D model for carbonation and moisture/heat flow in porous materials

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors extended the one-dimensional finite element model for the analysis of the carbonation mechanism to two-dimensional problems, where the governing equations for the propagation of aggressive agents through concrete are rewritten for two-dimensions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strätlingite formation in high alumina cement - silica fume systems: Significance of sodium ions

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of sodium sulphate on stratlingite formation in the high alumina cement water system is described, and reaction mechanisms associated with stratlinite and hydrogarnet formation are discussed.
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