The most important commercial outlet for coal ash is in the concrete
industry as a partial
replacement for Portland cement. In many concrete mixtures careful
control of air entrainment
is required, but the presence of solid carbon disrupts the air
entrainment process. An earlier
study focused on the fundamental role of carbons, which were found to
adsorb air-entraining
admixtures, the specialty surfactants used in concrete mixtures,
rendering them less active for
their primary function as stabilizing agents for air bubbles. The
present paper focuses on the
specific sorptive behavior of carbon black, which is used as a pigment
in some concrete
formulations and also serves as a convenient model substance for soot,
which may be present in
fly ash from coal combustion. The paper also describes microscopic
examination of several
commercial fly ash samples for the possible presence of soot. The
results show that eight
commercial carbon blacks interact strongly with the air-entraining
admixtures, the degree of
interaction increasing with decreasing primary particle size or
increasing nitrogen surface area.
Overall, the adsorption of air-entraining admixtures is believed
to be governed by the amount of
accessible, hydrophobic, carbonaceous surface area. Examination of
three fly ash samples from
commercial pulverized coal fired combustion systems resulted in the
conclusive identification of
at least trace amounts of soot in each sample, with significant amounts
found in one sample
intentionally generated under very poor combustion conditions.
Finally, a simple laboratory test
was developed to screen ash samples for the presence of significant
quantities of fine carbonaceous
particles, which, on the basis of the results of this study, can have a
negative impact on concrete
performance in certain special cases.
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