Abstract:
Hydrothermally cured or autoclaved cement-based building products have provided
many challenges to researchers. manufacturers, and users since their inception nearly 100
years ago. The advantages, including the development of high strength within a few hours
and a reduction of drying shrinkage, of the hydrothermal curing process have resulted in a
variety of building products: inevitably, the technology of their production has undergone
many stages of refinement. With the advent of nonconventional starting materials for the production
of modern cements, and the push to utilize renewable resources to form blended
cements, the chemical and physical make-up of hydrothermally cured building materials
has changed considerably in recent years and will continue to change. It is, therefore.
important to understand the chemical reactions taking place in an autoclave, and the consequent
phase developments, if building materials produced by this process continue to be successful
in the long term. A wide range of analytical techniques exists for characterizing the
phase development in cement-based materials. The purpose of this paper is to illustrate the
strength of thermal methods, especially when used in combination with other analytical techniques,
in the understanding of hydrothermal reactions.