Topic
Silica fume
About: Silica fume is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10177 publications have been published within this topic receiving 173857 citations.
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29 Dec 2001
TL;DR: The use of Synchroton sources in the study of Cement Materials as discussed by the authors has been shown to be useful in the analysis of Cements and their applications in many applications.
Abstract: 1. Cement Manufacture 2. Composition of Cement Phases 3. The Hydration of Portland Cement 4. Calcium Aluminate Cements 5. Properties of Concrete with Mineral and Chemical Admixtures 6. Special Cements 7. Developments with Oilwell Cements 8. Gypsum in Cements 9. Alkali-Silica Reaction in Concrete 10. Delayed Ettringite Formation 11. Chloride-Corrosion in Cementitious Systems 12. Blastfurnace Cements 13. Properties and Applications of Natural Pozzolanas 14. Pulverised Fuel Ash as a Cement Extender 15. Metakaolin as a Pollolanic Addition to Concrete 16. Condensed Silica Fume as a Cement Extender 17. Cement-Based Composite Micro-Structures 18. X-Ray Powder Diffraction Analysis of Cements 19. Electron Microscopy of Cements 20. Electrical Monitoring Methods in Cement Science 21. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Studies of Cements and Cement-Based Materials 22. The Use of Synchroton Sources in the Study of Cement Materials
637 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a water permeability resistant behavior and microstructure of concrete with nano-SiO2 were experimentally studied and it was shown that the micro-structured concrete with SiO2 is more uniform and compact than that of normal concrete.
633 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, an overview of the use of metakaolin as partial replacement of cement in mortar and concrete is presented, and properties reported in this paper are the fresh mortar/concrete properties, mechanical and durability properties.
623 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the possibility of using finely ground waste glass as partial cement replacement in concrete was examined through three sets of tests: the lime-glass tests to assess the pozzolanic activity of ground glass, the compressive strength tests of concrete having 30% cement replaced by ground glass to monitor the strength development, and the mortar bar tests to study the potential expansion.
591 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used differential thermal analysis, thermogravimetric analysis (DTA/TGA) and isothermal calorimetry to determine the degree of hydration of blended cements and pozzolan reaction.
581 citations