Aluminum lactate role in improving hydration and drying behavior of MgO-bonded refractory castables
D. S. Fini, V. C. Miguel, V. S. Pinto, V. C. Pandolfelli, M. H., Moreira, A. P. Luz

TL;DR
This study explores how aluminum lactate modifies hydration and drying behaviors in MgO-bonded refractory castables, leading to crack-free, stronger, and more resistant materials suitable for high-temperature applications.
Contribution
It introduces aluminum lactate as an additive that alters hydration phases and improves mechanical and thermal properties of MgO-based refractories.
Findings
Mg6Al2(OH)16(OH)2.4.5H2O becomes the main hydrated phase with AL.
Adding AL extends setting time and prevents cracking.
Refractories with AL show enhanced permeability, strength, and spalling resistance.
Abstract
Developing MgO-bonded castables is still an important subject for refractory producers and end-users based on the expansive character of the in-situ Mg(OH)2 formation. Considering that magnesia undergoes hydration when exposed to water and the generated hydrated phase needs to be properly accommodated in the resulting microstructure to inhibit the generation of cracks, it is very important to find out alternatives to control the MgO hydration reaction rate. This research investigated the use of aluminum lactate (AL) as a likely additive to change the hydration and drying behavior of vibratable castables bonded with different MgO sources (dead burnt, caustic or fumed one). Firstly, XRD, TG and DSC measurements of magnesia-based aqueous suspensions were evaluated to identify the AL effect on changing the hydration reaction products during the curing and drying steps. After that, Al2O3-MgO…
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