Aquaphotomic Study of Effects of Different Mixing Waters on the Properties of Cement Mortar
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results and Discussion
2.1. Mineral Content of Waters Used for Preparation of Cement
2.2. Aquaphotomic Characterization of Mixing Water
2.3. Aquaphotomic Characterization of Cement Mortar
2.3.1. Raw and Transformed near Infrared Spectra of Cement Mortar
2.3.2. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of Cement Mortar
2.3.3. Soft Modeling of Class Analogies (SIMCA) of Cement Mortar
2.3.4. Aquagrams of Cement Mortar
2.4. Characterization of the Internal Temperature Change and Thermal Strain in Cement Paste
2.5. Characteristics of Drying Shrinkage Strain
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Water Samples
3.2. Cement and Fine Aggregate (Sand)
3.3. Preparation of Hardened Cement Specimens
- Add water and cement to the container for mixing.
- Mix at a low speed for 30 s.
- Add fine aggregate.
- Mix at a high speed for 30 s.
- Scrape the mortar adhering to the walls and bottom of the mixing container (Stop for 90 s).
- Mix at high speed for 60 s and then take out.
3.4. NIR Spectroscopy
3.4.1. NIR Spectroscopy Measurement of Water Samples
3.4.2. NIR Spectroscopy Measurement of Cement Paste and Mortar
3.5. Aquaphotomic Spectral Data Analysis
3.5.1. Water Characterization
3.5.2. Cement Paste and Mortar Characterization
3.6. Physical Test Method for Cement Mortar
3.6.1. Temperature Change and Thermal Strain
3.6.2. Dry Shrinkage Test
4. Conclusions
- The results of the standard analysis of mineral constituents in four mixing waters demonstrated small differences considered negligible and irrelevant for the cement production according to the standards for the most countries. However, aquaphotomics’ characterization demonstrated that mixing waters have a higher solvation ability compared to the pure water and the largest differences between the four types of waters were found at the 1448 nm water absorbance band, assigned to the absorption of water molecules in solvation shells with four or five water molecules.
- The PCA analysis of cement paste and mortar created by different mixing waters demonstrated that the major variation in the spectra can be described by only two principal components, related to the changes of cement mortar during curing (in terms of days) and to the changes during early hydration reaction in the first 24 h. The most important water absorbance bands for the description of changes during curing were identified at 1391, 1397, 1472, and 1478 nm. The first two can be attributed to the absorbance of the confined water molecules in the interlayer between the crystal lattice, while the latter two to water molecular species with three hydrogen bonds indicated the semi-crystalline state of cement. For the description of the initial hydration reaction, the most important absorbance bands were found at 1360 and 1366 nm assigned to water solvation shells around ions, located at the edge and the corners of crystal lattices, and at 1472 nm, the water molecules bonded with three hydrogen bonds. There are indications that first two bands could be related to the hardness, which agrees well with the understanding of cement curing as the process of hardening of cement. The process of cement curing was described as a transformation of weakly hydrogen-bonded water to hydrogen-bonded water, which agrees with the release of heat during the reaction of cement hydration. Despite the common absorbance bands present in developed PCA models, each cement mortar demonstrated a specific time evolution depending on the water used for its preparation.
- The results of the SIMCA discriminating analysis confirmed that it is possible to discriminate the age of cement mortar with an accuracy higher than 90%, and to discriminate between mortars made with different mixing waters with accuracy higher than 82%. The discriminating powers of SIMCA demonstrated the importance of the absorbance band of 1472 nm (water molecules with three hydrogen bonds) for discrimination. The differences were found mostly in the area of hydrogen-bonded water and strongly bound water, which indicates differences in the water bound to cement components, i.e., the cement matrix differences as well.
- The entirety of aquaphotomics analysis discovered 18 water absorbance bands: 1342, 1354, 1366, 1379, 1385, 1391, 1397, 1410, 1428, 1441, 1447, 1460, 1472, 1490, 1503, 1515, 1534, and 1559 nm as absorbance bands that could be used to measure the state of water directly and the state of cement mortar during curing indirectly, over time. These absorbance bands can be considered as WAMACS, i.e., Water Matrix Coordinates and their combination was used to depict Water Spectral Patterns—WASPs of cement mortar in aquagrams. The aquagrams revealed that Wshallow and Wmix water mortars were similar, and Wtap and Wdist mortars were similar, indicating similar properties of the mortars on the macroscale. The aquagrams demonstrated differences at such a detailed scale in the water molecular matrix of the paste and mortar, practically from the very start when paste is mixed, providing a possibility for the prediction of mortar properties at the earliest possible stage.
- The measured values of thermal strain revealed that Wshallow and Wmix water mortars were similar, and Wtap and Wdist mortars were similar, strongly resembling grouping two-by-two, which is observed in the WASPs of mortars. Judging by the WASPs, it was concluded that hardened paste created by Wshallow and Wmix water has a less porous and more compact structure. The results of the drying shrinkage strain measurements performed over the period of 91 days after casting demonstrate considerably reduced drying shrinkage strain in specimens prepared with Wshallow and Wmix water. The drying shrinkage strain was about the same for the Wshallow and Wmix cement mortar, and Wdist and Wtap followed in increasing order. Similar to the results of thermal stress, grouping two-by-two was also observed in drying shrinkage properties closely matching the pattern observed in WASPs of cement paste.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Sample Availability
References
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Contained Elements (ppm) | Wdist | Wtap | Wshallow | Wmix |
---|---|---|---|---|
Li | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
B | 0.000 | 0.014 | 0.057 | 0.540 |
Na | 0.000 | 13.220 | 17.340 | 39.300 |
Mg | 0.002 | 2.074 | 4.364 | 12.105 |
Al | 0.000 | 0.014 | 0.000 | 0.006 |
Si | 0.000 | 2.870 | 24.400 | 20.570 |
K | 0.000 | 2.234 | 1.679 | 3.094 |
Ca | 0.107 | 11.315 | 11.555 | 28.750 |
Ti | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
Mn | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.001 | 0.108 |
Fe | 0.000 | 0.013 | 0.001 | 0.006 |
Cu | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.006 | 0.000 |
Zn | 0.000 | 0.003 | 0.012 | 0.002 |
Sr | 0.000 | 0.526 | 0.133 | 0.273 |
Ag | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
Ba | 0.000 | 0.012 | 0.019 | 0.046 |
Mixing Water | PC1 (%) | PC2 (%) | PC1 and PC2 (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Wdist | 87.7 | 10.16 | 97.86 |
Wtap | 91.06 | 7.57 | 98.63 |
Wshallow | 88.53 | 7.22 | 95.75 |
Wmix | 91.36 | 6.78 | 98.14 |
Water | Interclass Distance Compared to the Day 0 | Discrimination Accuracy (%) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
After 1 Day | After 3 Days | After 7 Days | ||
Wtap | 10.392 | 6.342 | 5.191 | 91.03 |
Wdist | 9.511 | 4.977 | 6.312 | 93.53 |
Wshallow | 9.807 | 4.539 | 4.030 | 94.12 |
Wmix | 8.945 | 6.471 | 7.204 | 98.18 |
Day | Interclass Distance Range Min to Max | Discrimination Accuracy (%) |
---|---|---|
Day 0 | 0.319–0.606 | 82.64 |
After 1 day | 0.244–2.056 | 88.33 |
After 3 days | 0.256–1.589 | 94.36 |
After 7 days | 0.244–1.013 | 91.68 |
Absorbance Band [nm] | Assignment/Remark |
---|---|
1342 | (1342.6 nm, 1st overt. of 3724 cm−1) proton hydrates [H+·(H2O)3]—H2O asymmetric stretch, 1st overt. [83] WAMACS C1: 1336–1348 nm: 1st overtone ν3 asymmetric stretch [51] |
1354 | (1353.18 nm, 1st over. of 3695 cm−1) two to four nonbonded OH stretches in 2 to 11 member cluster of hydrated proton [83] (1353.55 nm, 1st overt. of 3694 cm−1) free OH stretch (OH-·(H2O)2) [88] |
1366 | (1366.12 nm, 1st overt. of 3660 cm−1)—proton hydrates [H+·(H2O)2]—H2O asymmetric stretch [83] (1366.12 nm 1st overt. of 3660 cm−1) OH-stretch in (OH-·(H2O)2) [88] (1366.1 nm) Dangling -OH (non-hydrogen-bonded), 1st overt. [89] (1362 nm (7339 cm−1)) OH-coordinated with 1 or 2 Mg2+ on the corner and edge of the Mg(OH)2 surface [78] (1368 nm (7306 cm−1)) OH-coordinated with 3 Mg2+ [78] (1366 nm)—absorbance band of a compound highly correlated with hardness [79] WAMACS C2: 1360–1366 nm—water solvation shell OH-(H2O)1,2,4 [51] |
1379 | WAMACS C3: 1370–1376 nm—combination symmetric asymmetric stretch ν1+ ν3 [51] or WAMACS C4: 1380–1388 nm—water solvation shell OH-(H2O)1,4 [51] (1374 nm)—-OH group of Ca(OH)2 [90] (1373–1375 nm)—-OH of portlandite phase; this band is useful for diagnosis of the initiation of hydration process [90] (1379.31 nm, 1st overt. of 3625 cm−1)—proton oscillation, H2O symmetric stretch in H+·(H2O)6 [83] |
1385 | (1383.13 nm 1st overt. of 3615 cm−1)—H2O symmetric stretch in H+·(H2O)5 [83] (1383.13 nm, 1st overt. of 3615 cm−1) Interwater/Double donor stretch (OH- (H2O)4) [88] (1385.12 nm, 1st overt. of 3609.8 cm−1) H2O symmetric stretch in proton hydrate H+(H2O)4 [91] (1385.50 nm, 1st over. of 3608.8 cm−1) H2O symmetric stretch in proton hydrate H+(H2O)4 [92] WAMACS C4: 1380–1388 nm—water solvation shell OH-(H2O)1,4 [51] |
1391 | (1391.21 nm 1st overt. of 3594 cm−1) H2O symmetric stretch in proton hydrate H+(H2O)4 [91,92] or trapped water 1396–1403 nm [69] |
1397 | (1396.6 nm, 1st overt. of 3580 cm−1) proton hydrates [H+·(H2O)3]—H3O+ free-OH stretch, 1st overt. [83] (1397 nm (7158 cm−1))—1st overtone of the free OH group trapped in the hydrophobic interior [93] WAMACS C5: water confined in the local field of ions 1396–1403 nm [52,69] (1397.23 nm (7157 cm−1))—interlayer OH- (stacked between sheets of Mg(OH)2) [78] |
1410 | 1st overt. band of the OH stretching mode of free OH monomer [94] (1410.6 nm)—water species with no hydrogen bonds S0 [95] WAMACS C5: 1398–1418 nm—free water molecules S0 |
1428 | (1428.6 nm) isolated H3O+ -OH stretch vibration, 1st overt. [96] 1st overtone of the fundamental OH stretching vibration in water; the water molecules are condensed in one or more layers on sorption sites in the amorphous region; related to stiffness and strength [77] |
1441 | WAMACS C7: 1432–1444 nm—water molecules with 1 hydrogen bond S1 |
1447 | (1447 nm (6910 cm−1))—1st overt. of O−H stretching of the water OH hydrated to other water molecules (bulk state) [97] (1447.18 nm (6910 cm−1))—OH group involved in the OH⋯OH hydrogen bonding [98] (1447.18 nm, 1st overt. of 3445 cm−1)—stretching modes of surface H2O molecules or to an envelope of hydrogen-bonded surface OH groups [99] (1450.11 nm, 1st overt. of 3448 cm−1)—OH stretching vibrations of the water lattice in the hydrated calcium silicates and aluminosilicates (C–S–H and C–A–S–H) [90] WAMACS C8: 1448–1454 nm—solvation shell OH-(H2O)4,5 |
1460 | WAMACS C9: 1458–1468 nm—water molecules with 2 hydrogen bonds S2 |
1472 | (1470 nm)—chemically bound water in the hydrated calcium silicate phases [90] WAMACS C10: 1472–1482 nm—water molecules with 3 hydrogen bonds S3 |
1490 | WAMACS C11: 1482–1495 nm—water molecules with 4 hydrogen bonds S4 |
1503 | (1503.3 nm 1st overt. of 3326 cm−1)—OH stretching vibrations of hydrogen bonded water molecules participating in the crystal structure [100] (1503.3 nm 1st overt. of 3326 cm−1)—OH stretching vibration in Ice III [101] (1503.3 nm 1st overt. of 3326 cm−1)—strong intermolecular hydrogen bond [102] (1503.3 nm 1st overt. of 3326 cm−1)—water stretching vibrations in minerals, in connection with hydrogen defects (incorporation of hydrogen (protonation)) [103,104,105,106,107,108] |
1515 | WAMACS C12: 1506–1516 nm—combination of symmetric stretching and bending vibration ν1 + ν2, strongly bound water [51] |
1534 | (1534.21 nm, 1st overt. of 3259 cm−1)—hydrogen bonded hydroxyl groups (–O–Hδ+⋯Oδ−–) [109] (1534.21 nm, 1st overt. of 3259 cm−1)—the H–O stretching vibrations of the absorbent water [110] (1534.21 nm (6518 cm−1))—1st over. of hydrogen bonded O–H stretching [111] (1534.21 nm, 1st overt. of 3259 cm−1)—one of the 3 water stretching bands observed in carbonate mineral huanghoite by Raman spectroscopy (the other two being 1435 nm (3484 cm−1) and 1393 nm (3589 cm−1)) [103] (1534.21 nm, 1st overt. of 3259 cm−1)—sesquihydrate crystallite [112] (hydrate whose solid contains 3 molecules of water of crystallization per two molecules) (1534 nm)—one of 3 wavelengths used in multiple linear regression for predicting bread loaf volume (1506, 1534 and 1618 nm); measurement of some parameter related to volume independent of protein [113] |
1559 | (1557 nm) ionic bound water molecules 1st overt. [114] (1560 nm (3205 cm−1))—strongly hydrogen bonded water, water coordinated to cations [115] (1560 nm)—hydrogen bonded water [116] (1560 nm (6410 cm−1)) crystalline water ice feature [117] |
Water | Collection Site | Characteristics |
---|---|---|
Wdist | — | High purity Wdist purified by ion exchange method and followed by distillation |
Wtap | Osaka City, Osaka Prefecture, Japan | Tap water collected mainly from the surface water of Lake Biwa and purified at a water treatment facility |
Wshallow | Water from the shallow underground source located at the dept of 40 m | Natural hot spring Yunosato, Hashimoto City, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan (https://www.spa-yunosato.com/yunosato_eng/ accessed on 1 November 2022) |
Wmix | Water that is a blend of two types of spring waters (90% water from the shallow source located at 50 m depth and 10% water from the deep source at 1187 m depth) | Natural hot spring Yunosato, Hashimoto City, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan (https://www.spa-yunosato.com/yunosato_eng/ accessed on 1 November 2022); |
Chemical Name | Maximum Content Allowed (%) |
---|---|
MgO | 5.0 |
SO3 | 3.5 |
Ignition Loss | 5.0 |
Total alkali content | 0.75 |
Chemical Name | Content (%) |
---|---|
SiO2 | 98.4 |
Al2O3 | 0.4 |
Fe2O3 | 0.4 |
CaO | 0.2 |
MgO | 0.00 |
Na2O | 0.01 |
K2O | 0.01 |
Property | Value |
---|---|
Specific gravity in oven-dried condition | 2.64 |
Sater absorption rate | 0.42% |
Unit volume mass | 1.76 kg/L |
Solid content | 66.7% |
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Muncan, J.; Tamura, S.; Nakamura, Y.; Takigawa, M.; Tsunokake, H.; Tsenkova, R. Aquaphotomic Study of Effects of Different Mixing Waters on the Properties of Cement Mortar. Molecules 2022, 27, 7885. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27227885
Muncan J, Tamura S, Nakamura Y, Takigawa M, Tsunokake H, Tsenkova R. Aquaphotomic Study of Effects of Different Mixing Waters on the Properties of Cement Mortar. Molecules. 2022; 27(22):7885. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27227885
Chicago/Turabian StyleMuncan, Jelena, Satoshi Tamura, Yuri Nakamura, Mizuki Takigawa, Hisao Tsunokake, and Roumiana Tsenkova. 2022. "Aquaphotomic Study of Effects of Different Mixing Waters on the Properties of Cement Mortar" Molecules 27, no. 22: 7885. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27227885
APA StyleMuncan, J., Tamura, S., Nakamura, Y., Takigawa, M., Tsunokake, H., & Tsenkova, R. (2022). Aquaphotomic Study of Effects of Different Mixing Waters on the Properties of Cement Mortar. Molecules, 27(22), 7885. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27227885