Hydration of alkali-activated slag: comparison with ordinary Portland cement

Abstract
A multi-method approach was used for the investigation and comparison of alkali-activated slag binders (AAS), pure slag and ordinary Portland cement (OPC). X-ray fluorescence, X-ray powder diffraction, granulometry, calorimetry, thermo-gravimetric analysis and environmental scanning electron microscope investigations of the microstructure with energy dispersive X-ray analyses were used to characterise the cements and their hydrate phases. In addition, the chemical composition of the pore solution, including the different sulphur-containing ions, was analysed. The precipitation mechanisms during binder hydration in the AAS and OPC systems exhibit significant differences: in AAS the formation of the ‘outer product’ C-S-H is much faster than in OPC. The high Si concentrations in the pore solution during the early hydration of AAS are related to the fast dissolution of Na-metasilicate. The fast reaction of Na is an important factor for the voluminous precipitation of C-S-H within the interstitial space already during the first 24 h. In addition to the Na-metasilicate component, the high fineness of the slag represents a further important factor for the fast hydration of AAS. The small slag particles (< 2 μm) are completely dissolved or hydrated within the first 24 h, whereas hydration of the larger particles is much slower. The fast formation of a gel-like matrix in AAS is the product of a fast ‘through solution’ precipitation, which contrasts with the slower dissolution-precipitation mechanism of a ‘topotactic’ growth of C-S-H in OPC. The chemical and mineralogical characterisation of solid and liquid phases and their changes with time are the basis for thermodynamic modelling of the corresponding hydration process, which is presented in a second paper.