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Ultrasonic dispersion of hard dispersed ultrafine milled cement-based grout for water sealing of fractured hard rock

Draganović, Almir ; Karamanoukian, Antranik ; Ulriksen, Peter LU and Larsson, Stefan (2022) In Construction and Building Materials 317.
Abstract

Ever higher demands on the sealing of rock around underground structures drive the development of cement-based grouts. The results of the previous study demonstrated that it is possible to mill cement to approximately 20 to 25 µm and use it to seal fracture aperture down to approximately 70 µm. Further milling deteriorates the penetrability of the grouts due to the flocculation of the fine particles. This study investigates ultrasound as a technique to improve dispersion of grouts based on ultrafine milled cement. The grout tested is based on cement where 95% of the cement mass has particles smaller than 12 µm and is very hard to disperse. Dispersion with ultrasound is compared with a conventional laboratory mixer equipped with a disk... (More)

Ever higher demands on the sealing of rock around underground structures drive the development of cement-based grouts. The results of the previous study demonstrated that it is possible to mill cement to approximately 20 to 25 µm and use it to seal fracture aperture down to approximately 70 µm. Further milling deteriorates the penetrability of the grouts due to the flocculation of the fine particles. This study investigates ultrasound as a technique to improve dispersion of grouts based on ultrafine milled cement. The grout tested is based on cement where 95% of the cement mass has particles smaller than 12 µm and is very hard to disperse. Dispersion with ultrasound is compared with a conventional laboratory mixer equipped with a disk and rotor–stator system. The dispersion efficiency of this mixing equipment was tested by a filter pump. The results confirmed that a conventional laboratory mixer equipped with a disk is not at all suitable for dispersion of this grout. The laboratory mixer equipped with a rotor–stator system is much better than a disc but still cannot disperse this fine milled grout properly. Ultrasound was found to be the most effective method. The dispersion achieved, measured with a filter pump, was around 54 µm which indicates that it is possible to seal fracture aperture now down to 54 µm, which is a significant improvement.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Dispersion, Laboratory dissolver, Ultrafine cement grout, Ultrasound dissolver
in
Construction and Building Materials
volume
317
article number
125869
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85120826704
ISSN
0950-0618
DOI
10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2021.125869
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
a6f3df06-283d-4da2-a713-7618507f49c7
date added to LUP
2022-01-25 15:42:24
date last changed
2022-04-19 19:23:36
@article{a6f3df06-283d-4da2-a713-7618507f49c7,
  abstract     = {{<p>Ever higher demands on the sealing of rock around underground structures drive the development of cement-based grouts. The results of the previous study demonstrated that it is possible to mill cement to approximately 20 to 25 µm and use it to seal fracture aperture down to approximately 70 µm. Further milling deteriorates the penetrability of the grouts due to the flocculation of the fine particles. This study investigates ultrasound as a technique to improve dispersion of grouts based on ultrafine milled cement. The grout tested is based on cement where 95% of the cement mass has particles smaller than 12 µm and is very hard to disperse. Dispersion with ultrasound is compared with a conventional laboratory mixer equipped with a disk and rotor–stator system. The dispersion efficiency of this mixing equipment was tested by a filter pump. The results confirmed that a conventional laboratory mixer equipped with a disk is not at all suitable for dispersion of this grout. The laboratory mixer equipped with a rotor–stator system is much better than a disc but still cannot disperse this fine milled grout properly. Ultrasound was found to be the most effective method. The dispersion achieved, measured with a filter pump, was around 54 µm which indicates that it is possible to seal fracture aperture now down to 54 µm, which is a significant improvement.</p>}},
  author       = {{Draganović, Almir and Karamanoukian, Antranik and Ulriksen, Peter and Larsson, Stefan}},
  issn         = {{0950-0618}},
  keywords     = {{Dispersion; Laboratory dissolver; Ultrafine cement grout; Ultrasound dissolver}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Construction and Building Materials}},
  title        = {{Ultrasonic dispersion of hard dispersed ultrafine milled cement-based grout for water sealing of fractured hard rock}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2021.125869}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2021.125869}},
  volume       = {{317}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}