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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(8): 2029-34, 2016 Feb 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26858450

RESUMO

Strength and other mechanical properties of cement and concrete rely upon the formation of calcium-silicate-hydrates (C-S-H) during cement hydration. Controlling structure and properties of the C-S-H phase is a challenge, due to the complexity of this hydration product and of the mechanisms that drive its precipitation from the ionic solution upon dissolution of cement grains in water. Departing from traditional models mostly focused on length scales above the micrometer, recent research addressed the molecular structure of C-S-H. However, small-angle neutron scattering, electron-microscopy imaging, and nanoindentation experiments suggest that its mesoscale organization, extending over hundreds of nanometers, may be more important. Here we unveil the C-S-H mesoscale texture, a crucial step to connect the fundamental scales to the macroscale of engineering properties. We use simulations that combine information of the nanoscale building units of C-S-H and their effective interactions, obtained from atomistic simulations and experiments, into a statistical physics framework for aggregating nanoparticles. We compute small-angle scattering intensities, pore size distributions, specific surface area, local densities, indentation modulus, and hardness of the material, providing quantitative understanding of different experimental investigations. Our results provide insight into how the heterogeneities developed during the early stages of hydration persist in the structure of C-S-H and impact the mechanical performance of the hardened cement paste. Unraveling such links in cement hydrates can be groundbreaking and controlling them can be the key to smarter mix designs of cementitious materials.

2.
Nanoscale ; 12(25): 13491-13500, 2020 Jul 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32555900

RESUMO

Organic-inorganic hybrids have found increasing applications for thermal management across various disciplines. Such materials can achieve thermal conductivities below the so-called "amorphous limit" of their constituents' thermal conductivity. Despite their technological significance, a complete understanding of the origins of this thermal conductivity reduction remains elusive in these materials. In this paper, we develop a prototypical cross-linked organic-inorganic layered system, to investigate the spectral origins of its sub-amorphous thermal conductivity. Initially, we study the atomic structure of the model and find that besides polymer chain length, the relative drift of the layers governs the reduction in computed basal spacing, in agreement with experimental measurements. We, subsequently, find that organic cross-linking results in up to 40% reduction in thermal conductivity compared to inorganic samples. An in-depth investigation of vibrational modes reveals that this reduction is the result of reduced mode diffusivities, which in turn is a consequence of a vibrational mismatch between the organic and inorganic constituents. We also show that the contribution of propagating modes to the total thermal conductivity is not affected by organic cross-linking. Our approach paves the path toward a physics-informed analysis and design of a wide range of multifunctional hybrid nanomaterials for thermal management applications among others.

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