Crystals (Dec 2022)
Formation of α-Hemihydrate Inside of a Gypsum Crystal during the Dehydration Process
Abstract
Gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate) is one of the most used inorganic binding materials in the world. During calcination, calcium sulfate subhydrates are formed and, for technical reasons, are mixed with water to form dihydrate again. Therefore, the dehydration process of gypsum and the rehydration of hemihydrate were investigated. This dehydration process is technically performed in three different ways. Heating up, i.e., in a rotary kiln, leads to a preferred formation of β-hemihydrate, which crystallizes in comparatively small crystals. Similar results can be achieved by recrystallization from gypsum slurry around 100 °C in an autoclave or under a water steam atmosphere. However, in contrast, the recrystallization process here leads to the formation of a larger, needle-like morphology and sometimes branched α-hemihydrate crystals. The synthesis of β-hemihydrate was investigated in detail with a special thermal stage for optical microscopy on natural single gypsum crystals. It was observed that the crystal loses transparency because of the breaking surface of the crystals due to water evaporation. Furthermore, within a deeper layer of the crystal, new crystals become visible but disappear during dehydration of the upper layers. These are expected to be α-hemihydrate. This theory of the formation of α-hemihydrate inside of a gypsum crystal is experimentally proven in the present work. This work firstly shows that the observed crystallization inside of gypsum during dehydration is the formation of alpha-hemihydrate.
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