Advances in Materials Science and Engineering (Jan 2022)
Characterization of Magnesium Potassium Phosphate Cement-Based Grouting Material Blended with High Volume Industrial Wastes
Abstract
In the present research, industrial wastes, e.g., fly ash (FA), lithium slag (LS), ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBS), and red mud (RM) were utilized to prepare the magnesium phosphate cement (MPC)-based grouting material by a two-component grouting method. Successive additions of GGBS within 40% (C1–C5) led to reduced fluidity, increased pH value, and shortened setting time. The compressive strength increased first and then decreased. The strength value reached the maximum at a 20% dosage (C3). Increasing the content of RM from 0% (C4) to 25% (C9) resulted in prolonged setting time and an increased pH value. The fluidity and compressive strength increased first and then decreased. The fluidity and strength value became the highest at a 15% additive ratio (C7). GGBS can significantly improve the strength and water resistance at 7 days and 28 days by the potential hydraulic property. RM has a smaller particle size than MP, making the microstructure denser by the pore-filling effect. Thus, the drying shrinkage was increased after adding GGBS, while it was decreased when incorporating RM. The MPC-based grouting material has a controllable short setting of 3–21 min, self-leveling fluidity above 200 mm, a near-neutral pH value, high early strength (1 day compressive strength of 5 MPa), minor drying shrinkage (one-tenth of OPC), and excellent water resistance (over 85%), which is much superior to traditional grouting materials.