This review examines the detailed chemical insights that have been generated through 150 years of work worldwide on magnesium-based inorganic cements, with a focus on both scientific and patent literature. Magnesium carbonate, phosphate, silicate-hydrate, and oxysalt (both chloride and sulfate) cements are all assessed. Many such cements are ideally suited to specialist applications in precast construction, road repair, and other fields including nuclear waste immobilization. The majority of MgO-based cements are more costly to produce than Portland cement because of the relatively high cost of reactive sources of MgO and do not have a sufficiently high internal pH to passivate mild steel reinforcing bars. This precludes MgO-based cements from providing a large-scale replacement for Portland cement in the production of steel-reinforced concretes for civil engineering applications, despite the potential for CO2 emissions reductions offered by some such systems. Nonetheless, in uses that do not require steel reinforcement, and in locations where the MgO can be sourced at a competitive price, a detailed understanding of these systems enables their specification, design, and selection as advanced engineering materials with a strongly defined chemical basis.
A cementitious system for the immobilisation of magnesium rich Magnox sludge was produced by blending an Mg(OH)2 slurry with silica fume and an inorganic phosphate dispersant. The Mg(OH)2 was fully consumed after 28 days of curing, producing a disordered magnesium silicate hydrate (M-S-H) with cementitious properties. The structural characterisation of this M-S-H phase by (29)Si and (25)Mg MAS NMR showed clearly that it has strong nanostructural similarities to a disordered form of lizardite, and does not take on the talc-like structure as has been proposed in the past for M-S-H gels. The addition of sodium hexametaphosphate (NaPO3)6 as a dispersant enabled the material to be produced at a much lower water/solids ratio, while still maintaining the fluidity which is essential in practical applications, and producing a solid monolith. Significant retardation of M-S-H formation was observed with larger additions of phosphate, however the use of 1 wt% (NaPO3)6 was beneficial in increasing fluidity without a deleterious effect on M-S-H formation. This work has demonstrated the feasibility of using M-S-H as binder to structurally immobilise Magnox sludge, enabling the conversion of a waste into a cementitious binder with potentially very high waste loadings, and providing the first detailed nanostructural description of the material thus formed.
Magnesium potassium phosphate cements (MKPCs), blended with 50 wt.% fly ash (FA) or ground granulated blast furnace slag (GBFS) to reduce heat evolution, water demand and cost, were assessed using compressive strength, X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy on 25 Mg, 27 Al, 29 Si, 31 P and 39 K nuclei. We present the first definitive evidence that dissolution of the glassy aluminosilicate phases of both FA and GBFS occurred under the pH conditions of MKPC. In addition to the main binder phase, struvite-K, an amorphous orthophosphate phase was detected in FA/MKPC and GBFS/MKPC systems. It was postulated that an aluminium phosphate phase was formed, however, no significant Al-O-P interactions were identified. High-field NMR analysis of the GBFS/MKPC system indicated the potential formation of a potassium-aluminosilicate phase. This study demonstrates the need for further research on these binders, as both FA and GBFS are generally regarded as inert fillers within MKPC.
Standard methods to assess the durability of vitrified radioactive waste were first developed in the 1980’s and, over the last 40 years, have evolved to yield a range of responses depending on experimental conditions and glass composition. Mechanistic understanding of glass dissolution has progressed in parallel, enhancing our interpretation of the data acquired. With the implementation of subsurface disposal for vitrified radioactive waste drawing closer, it is timely to review the available standard methodologies and reflect upon their relative advantages, limitations, and how the data obtained can be interpreted to support the post-closure safety case for radioactive waste disposal.
Struvite-K (MgKPO4·6H2O) is a magnesium potassium phosphate mineral with naturally cementitious properties, which is finding increasing usage as an inorganic cement for niche applications including nuclear waste management and rapid road repair. Struvite-K is also of interest in sustainable phosphate recovery from wastewater and, as such, a detailed knowledge of the crystal chemistry and high-temperature behavior is required to support further laboratory investigations and industrial applications. In this study, the local chemical environments of synthetic struvite-K were investigated using high-field solid-state 25Mg and 39K MAS NMR techniques, alongside 31P MAS NMR and thermal analysis. A single resonance was present in each of the 25Mg and 39K MAS NMR spectra, reported here for the first time alongside the experimental and calculated isotropic chemical shifts, which were comparable to the available data for isostructural struvite (MgNH4PO4·6H2O). An in situ high-temperature XRD analysis of struvite-K revealed the presence of a crystalline–amorphous–crystalline transition that occurred between 30 and 350 °C, following the single dehydration step of struvite-K. Between 50 and 300 °C, struvite-K dehydration yielded a transient disordered (amorphous) phase identified here for the first time, denoted δ-MgKPO4. At 350 °C, recrystallization was observed, yielding β-MgKPO4, commensurate with an endothermic DTA event. A subsequent phase transition to γ-MgKPO4 was observed on further heating, which reversed on cooling, resulting in the α-MgKPO4 structure stabilized at room temperature. This behavior was dissimilar from that of struvite exposed to high temperature, where NH4 liberation occurs at temperatures >50 °C, indicating that struvite-K could potentially withstand high temperatures via a transition to MgKPO4.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.