journal article Open Access Apr 21, 2025

Concentrated salt water can partially replace sodium hydroxide in alkali activation of blast furnace slag

View at Publisher Save 10.1111/jace.20596
Abstract
Abstract

Alkali‐activated materials are low‐CO
2
alternative binders, but the alkali‐activator component contributes significantly to the CO
2
emissions, costs, and safety risks. This study explores the potential of partially replacing NaOH with highly concentrated salt waters as an activator for blast furnace slag and related chemical mechanisms. Four water types were compared: simulated brine (∼105‰ salinity), NaCl and Na
2
SO
4
solutions, and deionized water. Results show that NaOH molarity can be reduced to 0.1 mol/L (or 0.16 weight% NaOH of slag weight—a significantly lower value than typically required) using simulated brine, while achieving a 28‐day compressive strength of 28.0 MPa—more than double compared to deionized water. Slag dissolution increased substantially upon using salt waters with 0.1 mol/L NaOH in comparison to deionized water. Thermodynamic modeling and slag dissolution studies indicated that salt anions (e.g., SO
4
2−
and Cl

) formed ion‐pair complexes with Ca and Mg, and thus drove the enhanced slag dissolution. The similar likely occurs also when using Na
2
SO
4
as an alkali activator for which the mechanism has been unclear in the existing literature. From the practical point of view, the highly concentrated salt waters could largely replace NaOH in certain applications of alkali‐activated slags when no steel reinforcements are required.
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