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Cement paste heat treatment

Considerable development has occurred on sintered ceramics as bone substitutes. Sintered ceramics, such as alumina-based ones, are uru eactive materials as compared to CBPCs. CBPCs, because they are chemically synthesized, should perform much better as biomaterials. Sintered ceramics are fabricated by heat treatment, which makes it difficult to manipulate their microstructure, size, and shape as compared to CBPCs. Sintered ceramics may be implanted in place but cannot be used as an adhesive that will set in situ and form a joint, or as a material to fill cavities of complicated shapes. CBPCs, on the other hand, are formed out of a paste by chemical reaction and thus have distinct advantages, such as easy delivery of the CBPC paste that fills cavities. Because CBPCs expand during hardening, albeit slightly, they take the shape of those cavities. Furthermore, some CBPCs may be resorbed by the body, due to their high solubility in the biological environment, which can be useful in some applications. CBPCs are more easily manufactured and have a relatively low cost compared to sintered ceramics such as alumina and zirconia. Of the dental cements reviewed in Chapter 2 and Ref. [1], plaster of paris and zinc phosphate... [Pg.245]

The delayed ettringite formation is rated among the internal corrosion of concrete, which is induced by a heat treatment of concrete, and thus occurring mainly during the precast concrete elements production. However, one carmot exclude the temperature rise up to 70 °C in the interior of massive concrete stracture, as a consequence of heat evolution process in hardened cement paste, and in this condition ettringite can be unstable. [Pg.394]


See other pages where Cement paste heat treatment is mentioned: [Pg.10]    [Pg.269]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.590]    [Pg.670]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.422]    [Pg.1120]    [Pg.1775]    [Pg.120]   


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Cement paste

Heat treatment

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