4.7 Article

Role of chemical admixtures on 3D printed Portland cement: Assessing rheology and buildability

Journal

CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDING MATERIALS
Volume 314, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2021.125666

Keywords

3D printing; Cement; Chemical admixtures; Rheology; Buildability

Funding

  1. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) [CAPES-PRINT/88881.310728/2018-01]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)

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Printable concretes require specific rheological properties that can be improved with chemical additives, but interactions between different additives in co-assembly can affect their effectiveness.
Concretes intended for printing need specific rheological properties that are not found in traditional ones. Printable concretes must have as much consistency as possible and, at the same time, still need to be pumpable. Although the use of chemical additives is a known solution to overcome these problems, their effectiveness can be partially or totally compromised when used in combination. For example, a particular superplasticizer may not work in the presence of a setting retarder or may weaken the potency of an accelerator. The lack of literature on the possible interactions of different additives used in co-assembly motivated this work. In this, it was demonstrated how fluid mixtures can be rapidly made buildable, continuously, from pumping to printing with different chemical admixtures. Setting retarders, accelerators and a PCE-based superplasticizer were tested on different contents, singly and in co-assembly, to determine their interactions from a rheological point of view. The main results show that the superplasticizer and setting retarders are efficient in improving the open time maintaining the buildability to a critical concentration. When added in co-assembly, their effectiveness can be nullified if an intercalated stirring is not applied, therefore presenting a strong interaction. The setting accelerators have also shown their role rapidly increasing the structuration rate of cement pastes but needing significantly higher contents when co-assembled with the superplasticizer to compensate for their retarding and repulsive effect.

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