Journal of South China University of Technology (Natural Science Edition) ›› 2016, Vol. 44 ›› Issue (6): 47-52.doi: 10.3969/j.issn.1000-565X.2016.06.008

• Materials Science & Technology • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Phase Change of Steel Slag During Reconstruction by Lime

YIN Su-hong1 GAO Fan1 GUO Hui1,2 YANG Xu1   

  1. 1.School of Materials Science and Engineering,South China University of Technology,Guangzhou 510640,Guangdong,China; 2.Changjiang River Scientific Research Institute,Changjiang Water Resources Commission,Wuhan 430010,Hubei,China
  • Received:2015-11-09 Revised:2015-12-07 Online:2016-06-25 Published:2016-05-03
  • Contact: 殷素红(1971-),女,博士,教授,主要从事水泥、混凝土材料和固体废弃物资源化利用研究. E-mail:imshyin@scut.edu.cn
  • About author:殷素红(1971-),女,博士,教授,主要从事水泥、混凝土材料和固体废弃物资源化利用研究.
  • Supported by:
    Supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(51372088)

Abstract: Steel slag was reconstructed by using lime as the single controlling material at a high temperature,and XRD,petrographic analysis and SEM techniques were adopted to determine the mineral composition of the modified steel slag as well as the transformation of the RO phase in the modification process.Moreover,the stability and the activity index of the modified steel slag were tested.The results demonstrate that (1) the RO phase primarily reacts with CaO,in which FeO phase is decomposed into Fe3O4 ,CF (calcium ferrite),C2F (dicalcium ferrite), Ca2 (AlFe)O5 and C4 AF (tetracalcium alumino-ferrite) successively with the increase of CaO content,and a part of MgO phase exists in the form of MgO crystal,and the others behave as the solid solution in the silicate and liquid phases; (2) when the CaO/SiO2 mole ratio is not large enough,C3 S (tricalcium silicate) in the original steel slag is resolved into C2 S (dicalcium silicate) in the modification process; (3) no C3 S generates even when the CaO/SiO2 mole ratio reaches 3 because CaO primarily reacts with high-content iron; (4) only when the iron reacts completely,may the redundant CaO react with C2 S to produce C3 S; and (5) both the stability and the cementitious activity of the steel slag significantly improve after the modification by lime.

Key words: steel slag reconstruction, lime, mineral composition, RO phase, cementitious activity, phase change