This paper studies the reaction between alkaline metal ions Li+, Na+ and K+ and ASR (alkali-silica reaction) reactive aggregates to determine whether Li+ can substitute Na+ and K+ that are unified in cement pa...This paper studies the reaction between alkaline metal ions Li+, Na+ and K+ and ASR (alkali-silica reaction) reactive aggregates to determine whether Li+ can substitute Na+ and K+ that are unified in cement paste. Reactive aggregates use meta-sandstone from eastern Taiwan and Pyrex glass. Non-reactive aggregates use siliceous sand. The results show that the dissolved amount of SiO2 is lower when the reactive aggregates are immersed in an 80 ℃1 N LiOH'H20 solution than in NaOH and KOH solutions. The reduced amounts of OH and Li+ in the solution are also higher than those in the NaOH and KOH solutions. These results reveal that reactive SiO2 can react with LiOH to form a reactant with low water solubility. When the powder of the cement paste is immersed in an 80 ℃ 1 N LiOH-H2O solution, the amounts of free Na+ and K+ in the solution are higher than those in water. The increased amount increases with the duration of immersion. The amount of Li+ in the solution also decreases with the duration of immersion. These results reveal that Li+ can substitute Na+ and K+ that are unified in cement paste, which indicates that ASR can be prevented with the existence of Li+.展开更多
文摘This paper studies the reaction between alkaline metal ions Li+, Na+ and K+ and ASR (alkali-silica reaction) reactive aggregates to determine whether Li+ can substitute Na+ and K+ that are unified in cement paste. Reactive aggregates use meta-sandstone from eastern Taiwan and Pyrex glass. Non-reactive aggregates use siliceous sand. The results show that the dissolved amount of SiO2 is lower when the reactive aggregates are immersed in an 80 ℃1 N LiOH'H20 solution than in NaOH and KOH solutions. The reduced amounts of OH and Li+ in the solution are also higher than those in the NaOH and KOH solutions. These results reveal that reactive SiO2 can react with LiOH to form a reactant with low water solubility. When the powder of the cement paste is immersed in an 80 ℃ 1 N LiOH-H2O solution, the amounts of free Na+ and K+ in the solution are higher than those in water. The increased amount increases with the duration of immersion. The amount of Li+ in the solution also decreases with the duration of immersion. These results reveal that Li+ can substitute Na+ and K+ that are unified in cement paste, which indicates that ASR can be prevented with the existence of Li+.