Insights into the hydration kinetics and microstructural evolution of ultra-high performance cementitious composite at mid-to-low curing temperatures

Fangyu Han, Jialiang Wang*, Xuping Ji, Shuohui Chen, Jianzhong Liu, Min Wu, Jiaping Liu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperJournal articleResearchpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Strength insufficiency in ultra-high performance cementitious composites (UHPCC) during winter construction has attracted attention, yet the mechanisms underlying the impacts of mid-to-low temperatures on strength development remain unclear. This study systematically investigated the mechanisms underlying the early-age strength insufficiency of UHPCC within the temperature range of 5°C to 20°C. The effects of curing temperatures on hydration reactions, microstructural evolution, and mechanical strength were comprehensively analyzed. The results revealed that during the early hydration stage (0–3d), lower curing temperatures (5°C, 10°C) significantly reduced hydration reaction rates and the formation of hydration products, leading to lower matrix density and early strength compared to 20°C, demonstrating a pronounced thermodynamic response. With prolonged curing time (7–28d), lower temperatures, particularly at 5°C, facilitated the accumulation of hydration products and pore structure refinement, partially mitigating adverse effects of initial delays. Microscopic characterizations (SEM-EDS, TGA, FTIR, XRD) confirmed that low temperatures influenced the formation and transformation of critical hydration products such as C-(A)-S-H gel and Ca(OH)2, while potentially inducing nano- and microscale structural defects in the material matrix. Hydration kinetics analysis indicated that UHPCC hydration rates were highly sensitive to temperature, with a reduction to 5°C lowering reaction rates by approximately 58.9 %. These complex hydration behavior of UHPCC contribute to the nonlinear decline in the strength development as temperatures decrease, with strength losses reaching as high as 31.8 % at 10°C. The findings provide scientific insights and practical guidance for optimizing UHPCC performance in real-world low-temperature construction environments.

Original languageEnglish
Article number140403
JournalConstruction and Building Materials
Volume468
ISSN0950-0618
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Mar 2025

Keywords

  • Hydration kinetics
  • Microstructural evolution
  • Mid-to-low temperature curing
  • Strength development
  • Ultra-high performance cementitious composite

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