It has long been realized that cations play a critical role in the readsorption of water into the interlayer region in clay minerals. To explore possible differences in the water dynamics related to the presence of cations in clays, and to examine the dynamics of its surface water, which plays a prominent role in diffusion of water in clay barriers a comparative study was carried out to highlight differences between water dynamics in montmorillonite and halloysite. Whereas montmorillonite has interlayer cations that interact with interlayer water, and which can rehydrate after dehydration at temperature, halloysite has no interlayer cations. Water is found in both interlayers and on the surface of these clay particles. In this study we show that by combining incoherent inelastic neutron scattering (quasi-elastic and elastic fixed window) and neutron spin echo, it was possible to discriminate the dynamics of surface water (by collapsing the interlayer region by heating and rehydrating the surface layer) from interlayer water. The analysis of the elastic fixed window scans in the temperature range 5−300 K revealed an extension of water dynamics in montmorillonite to lower temperatures than in halloysite. These differences suggested mechanisms that cations (Na+ in this case) in the interlayer regions facilitate water mobility allowing interlayer water to be readmitted to montmorillonite. Finally it was shown that the occurrence of magnetic fluctuations, caused by the presence of paramagnetic Fe3+ ions in the crystalline clay lattice, gave rise to a quasi-elastic contribution that disrupted the evaluation of water diffusion computed from such measurements. Therefore previous estimates of water diffusion coefficients might have been overestimated in recent literature.
Portland cement reacts with water to form an amorphous paste through a chemical reaction called hydration. In concrete the formation of pastes causes the mix to harden and gain strength to form a rock-like mass. Within this process lies the key to a remarkable peculiarity of concrete: it is plastic and soft when newly mixed, strong and durable when hardened. These qualities explain why one material, concrete, can build skyscrapers, bridges, sidewalks and superhighways, houses, and dams. The character of the concrete is determined by the quality of the paste. Creep and shrinkage of concrete specimens occur during the loss and gain of water from cement paste. To better understand the role of water in mature concrete, a series of quasielastic neutron scattering (QENS) experiments were carried out on cement pastes with water/cement ratio varying between 0.32 and 0.6. The samples were cured for about 28 days in sealed containers so that the initial water content would not change. These experiments were carried out with an actual sample of Portland cement rather than with the components of cement studied by other workers. The QENS spectra differentiated between three different water interactions: water that was chemically bound into the cement paste, the physically bound or "glassy water" that interacted with the surface of the gel pores in the paste, and unbound water molecules that are confined within the larger capillary pores of cement paste. The dynamics of the "glassy" and "unboud" water in an extended time scale, from a hundred picoseconds to a few nanoseconds, could be clearly differentiated from the data. While the observed motions on the picosecond time scale are mainly stochastic reorientations of the water molecules, the dynamics observed on the nanosecond range can be attributed to long-range diffusion. Diffusive motion was characterized by diffusion constants in the range of (0.6-2) 10(-9) m(2)/s, with significant reduction compared to the rate of diffusion for bulk water. This reduction of the water diffusion is discussed in terms of the interaction of the water with the calcium silicate gel and the ions present in the pore water.
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