Studies on Cement Pastes Exposed to Water and Solutions of Biological Waste.
Agnieszka SujakMichał PyzalskiKarol DurczakTomasz BrylewskiPaweł MurzynKrzysztof PilarskiPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The paper presents studies on the early stages of biological corrosion of ordinary Portland cements (OPC) subjected to the reactive media from the agricultural industry. For ten months, cement pastes of CEM I type with various chemical compositions were exposed to pig slurry, and water was used as a reference. The phase composition and structure of hydrating cement pastes were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD), thermal analysis (DTA/TG/DTG/EGA), and infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR). The mechanical strength of the cement pastes was examined. A 10 to 16% decrease in the mechanical strength of the samples subjected to pig slurry was observed. The results indicated the presence of thaumasite (C 3 S·CO 2 ·SO 3 ·15H 2 O) as a biological corrosion product, likely formed by the reaction of cement components with living matter resulting from the presence of bacteria in pig slurry. Apart from thaumasite, portlandite (Ca(OH) 2 )-the product of hydration-as well as ettringite (C 3 A·3CaSO 4 ·32H 2 O) were also observed. The study showed the increase in the calcium carbonate (CaCO 3 ) phase. The occurrence of unreacted phases of cement clinker, i.e., dicalcium silicate (C 2 S) and tricalcium aluminate (C 3 A), in the samples was confirmed. The presence of thaumasite phase and the exposure condition-dependent disappearance of CSH phase (calcium silicate hydrate), resulting from the hydration of the cements, were demonstrated.