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      Magnesia-Based Cements: A Journey of 150 Years, and Cements for the Future?

      1 , 1
      Chemical reviews
      American Chemical Society (ACS)

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          Abstract

          This review examines the detailed chemical insights that have been generated through 150 years of work worldwide on magnesium-based inorganic cements, with a focus on both scientific and patent literature. Magnesium carbonate, phosphate, silicate-hydrate, and oxysalt (both chloride and sulfate) cements are all assessed. Many such cements are ideally suited to specialist applications in precast construction, road repair, and other fields including nuclear waste immobilization. The majority of MgO-based cements are more costly to produce than Portland cement because of the relatively high cost of reactive sources of MgO and do not have a sufficiently high internal pH to passivate mild steel reinforcing bars. This precludes MgO-based cements from providing a large-scale replacement for Portland cement in the production of steel-reinforced concretes for civil engineering applications, despite the potential for CO2 emissions reductions offered by some such systems. Nonetheless, in uses that do not require steel reinforcement, and in locations where the MgO can be sourced at a competitive price, a detailed understanding of these systems enables their specification, design, and selection as advanced engineering materials with a strongly defined chemical basis.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Chem. Rev.
          Chemical reviews
          American Chemical Society (ACS)
          1520-6890
          0009-2665
          Apr 13 2016
          : 116
          : 7
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Immobilisation Science Laboratory, Department of Materials Science & Engineering, University of Sheffield , Sheffield S1 3JD, United Kingdom.
          Article
          10.1021/acs.chemrev.5b00463
          27002788
          a0da8d08-899c-4723-a9d0-845bed1964a3
          History

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