Interaction of Alkalis (CS+) With Calcium Silicates Hydrates

1997 ◽  
Vol 506 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Faucon ◽  
T. Charpentier ◽  
P. Henocq ◽  
J.C. Petit ◽  
J. Virlet ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTC-S-H of different Ca/Si ratios were synthesized in suspension. Cesium chloride (0.5 M) was put in contact with these C-S-H in reactors for 30 days at 25 °C with solution/solid ratios of 50. The quantities of cesium fixed by the C-S-H was determined by microanalyses and the mechanisms of retention in relation with the C-S-H structure was investigated by 133Cs Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR). The influence of the humidity yield in which the C-S-H were stored was also studied.At 100% of humidity, some cesium ions are trapped in the pore network of the C-S-H. However, most cesium ions are incorporated in the hydrated interlayers of the C-S-H between the silica chains of the structure. They are mobile in this interlayer space. At high Ca/Si ratio, the charge of incorporated Cs+ ions in the structure should be compensated by the associated Cl- incorporation. At low Ca/Si, the presence of silanol groups in the C-S-H structure, which becomes closer to that of tobermorite (Ca/Si about 0.8), makes possible the exchange or substitution H'<->Cs'. The resulting retention of cesium in the C-S-H then becomes higher.

Author(s):  
M.J. Hennessy ◽  
E. Kwok

Much progress in nuclear magnetic resonance microscope has been made in the last few years as a result of improved instrumentation and techniques being made available through basic research in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technologies for medicine. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) was first observed in the hydrogen nucleus in water by Bloch, Purcell and Pound over 40 years ago. Today, in medicine, virtually all commercial MRI scans are made of water bound in tissue. This is also true for NMR microscopy, which has focussed mainly on biological applications. The reason water is the favored molecule for NMR is because water is,the most abundant molecule in biology. It is also the most NMR sensitive having the largest nuclear magnetic moment and having reasonable room temperature relaxation times (from 10 ms to 3 sec). The contrast seen in magnetic resonance images is due mostly to distribution of water relaxation times in sample which are extremely sensitive to the local environment.


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