Experimental Study on the Curing Mechanism of Red Mud-Based Stabilized Soil Co-Modified by Nano-SiO2 and Gypsum
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Raw Materials
2.1.1. Red Mud
2.1.2. Nano-SiO2
2.1.3. Cement
2.1.4. Gypsum
2.2. Specimen Preparation
- ①
- Drying and grinding of red mud specimens into powder form;
- ②
- Add cement and powdered gypsum to the red mud specimen with the designed dosage and use a small mixer to mix well;
- ③
- Add deionized water to the specimen with the maximum dry density and optimum water content determined by the compaction test and mix well;
- ④
- The test material will be made into 5 mm × 5 mm cylindrical compressive specimens, and the specimen production time should be controlled within 20 min after adding gypsum;
- ⑤
- The finished specimens were placed in an environment with a temperature of 20 °C and a relative humidity of 95% for curing, and on the last day of the curing time, the specimens were immersed for 24 h, after which the specimens were taken out and air-dried, and the unconfined compressive test was performed;
- ⑥
- After the specimens are made, they are left to standing curing (in an environment with a temperature of 20 °C and a relative humidity of 95%) for different periods (i.e., 1, 7, 14, 28, 60, and 120 days) before the mechanical and microstructure experiments. On the last day of the curing time, the specimen will be immersed in water for 24 h and then removed and air-dried.
2.3. Testing Methods
2.3.1. Unconfined Compression Test
2.3.2. Scanning Electron Microscope Test
2.3.3. Energy Spectrum Analysis Test
2.3.4. X-ray Diffraction Test
2.3.5. X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy Test
3. Results and Analysis
3.1. The Unconfined Compressive Strength
3.1.1. Effect of Cement Content
3.1.2. Effect of Synergistic Modification of Nano-SiO2, Gypsum, and Cement
3.2. Micro-Morphology and Curing Characteristics of Red Mud-Based Stabilized Soil
3.2.1. Micromorphology
3.2.2. Curing Characteristics
- (1)
- SEM-EDX
- (2)
- XRD
- (3)
- XPS
4. Curing Mechanics of Red Mud-Based Stabilized Soil
4.1. Mechanical Compaction
4.2. Hydration Reaction and Pozzolanic Reaction
4.3. Facilitating Effect of Nano-SiO2
4.3.1. Promotion of Early Hydration Reaction
4.3.2. Provide Silicon Source
4.4. Enhancement Effect of Gypsum
4.5. Effect of Calcium to Silicon Ratio
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Cement alone can improve the unconfined compressive strength of red mud-based stabilized soil; with the synergistic modification of nano-SiO2, gypsum, and cement, the 7 d unconfined compressive strength of red mud-based stabilized soil is greater than 2 MPa under the synergistic effect of nano-SiO2 (1%, 2% and 3%, respectively), which meets the compressive strength requirement of road subgrade material, and the highest unconfined compressive strength of nano-SiO2 combination is 2748 kPa;
- (2)
- In the microstructure study, the SEM test results showed that the soil structural compactness did not increase with the increase in nano-SiO2 when nano-SiO2, gypsum, and cement were co-modified, and the soil structural crack rate was the lowest, and the structural compactness was the best when nano-SiO2 was used at 1%;
- (3)
- High magnification SEM tests reveal that when nano-SiO2, gypsum, and cement are synergistically modified, it is found that the increase in needle-like and columnar AFt in the cementitious products is due to the 6% gypsum added to the modified material, which creates conditions for the formation of more Aft. The XRD results showed that the gypsum diffraction peaks of the NS1CS6PC3 modified combination of red clay-based stabilized soil tended to disappear with the growth of the maintenance age, indicating that it was continuously transformed into AFt. The increase in binding energy of hydration product-related ions in the modified material also indicates that the strength of the modified material is improved;
- (4)
- Mechanical compaction is a prerequisite for chemical curing, and the chemical curing mechanism contains the hydration reaction, pozzolanic reaction, the promotion effect of nano-SiO2, and the enhancement effect of gypsum. The amount of nano-SiO2 is small, but it can promote the early hydration reaction process and hydration degree, providing more silica sources for the stabilized soil material. This paper established a model of nano-SiO2 to promote the early hydration process of red clay-based stabilized soil and revealed the mechanism of nano-SiO2 to promote the hydration process of red clay-based stabilized soil; the modification effect of gypsum is key in providing a calcium source to the red clay-based stabilized soil system. The key role of gypsum in the modification is to provide a calcium source, which contributes to the conversion of all or most of the C3A in cement into AFt, and at the same time, with Si4+ ions in the material, to generate C-S-H hydration gel under alkaline environment, which further enhances the strength of the modified stabilized soil.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Fe2O3 | Al2O3 | SiO2 | CaO | Na2O | TiO2 | MgO | K2O | LOL | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Average value | 37.08% | 18.89% | 12.35% | 10.56% | 5.23% | 6.21% | 0.68% | 0.12% | 6.23% |
Materials | Particle Size (nm) | Purity (%) | Specific Surface Area (m2/g) | Bulk Density (g/cm3) | Color | pH |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nano-SiO2 | 1~100 | 99.9 | 240 | 0.06 | White | 4–7 |
Calcium Oxide (CaO) | Silicon Dioxide (SiO)2 | Aluminum Oxide (AlO)23 | Iron Oxide (FeO)23 | Titanium Dioxide (TiO)2 | Sulfur Trioxide (SO)3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
65.13% | 21.32% | 5.35% | 3.96% | 0.25% | 0.30% |
Modified Solutions | I | II | III | IV | V |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PC individually modified | PC1 | PC3 | PC5 | PC7 | PC9 |
NS+ CS6 + PC3 synergistic modification | NS0.5CS6PC3 | NS1CS6PC3 | NS2CS6PC3 | NS3CS6PC3 |
Modified Specimens | Conservation Age/d | Binding Energy/eV | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ca2p | Si2p | Al2p | Na1s | O1s | S2p | ||
NS1CS6PC3 | 7 | 346.90 | 102.17 | 74.14 | 1071.71 | 531.32 | 169.09 |
28 | 346.97 | 102.18 | 74.18 | 1071.76 | 531.33 | 169.28 | |
60 | 347.05 | 102.23 | 74.23 | 1071.94 | 531.44 | 169.61 | |
NS2CS6PC3 | 60 | 347.04 | 102.47 | 74.22 | 1071.72 | 531.47 | 169.55 |
NS3CS6PC3 | 60 | 346.96 | 102.65 | 74.32 | 1071.63 | 531.58 | 169.50 |
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Chen, S.; Ou, X.; Jiang, J.; Tan, Z. Experimental Study on the Curing Mechanism of Red Mud-Based Stabilized Soil Co-Modified by Nano-SiO2 and Gypsum. Materials 2023, 16, 6016. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16176016
Chen S, Ou X, Jiang J, Tan Z. Experimental Study on the Curing Mechanism of Red Mud-Based Stabilized Soil Co-Modified by Nano-SiO2 and Gypsum. Materials. 2023; 16(17):6016. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16176016
Chicago/Turabian StyleChen, Shengjin, Xiaoduo Ou, Jie Jiang, and Zhijie Tan. 2023. "Experimental Study on the Curing Mechanism of Red Mud-Based Stabilized Soil Co-Modified by Nano-SiO2 and Gypsum" Materials 16, no. 17: 6016. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16176016
APA StyleChen, S., Ou, X., Jiang, J., & Tan, Z. (2023). Experimental Study on the Curing Mechanism of Red Mud-Based Stabilized Soil Co-Modified by Nano-SiO2 and Gypsum. Materials, 16(17), 6016. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16176016