Water Weakening of Calcium Oxide

J Rimsza and A Ilgen, JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C, 126, 9493-9501 (2022).

DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.2c01343

Chemomechanical processes such as water weakening can control the permeability and deformation of rocks and manmade materials. Here, atomistic modeling and nanomechanical experiments were used to identify molecular origins of chemomechanical effects in calcium oxide (CaO) and its effect on observed elastic, plastic, and brittle deformation. Classical molecular dynamics simulations with the bond order-based reactive force-field ReaxFF were used to assess brittle fracture. In the presence of water, CaO fractured earlier and more often during quasi- static loading, with a calculated reduction in fracture toughness of similar to 80% associated with changes in the stress distribution around the crack tip. Experimentally, elastic and plastic deformation of CaO surfaces exposed to water was assessed experimentally using in situ liquid nanoindentation. Nanoindentation showed that following exposure to water, the contact hardness decreased by 1-2 orders of magnitude and decreased the modulus by 2-3 orders of magnitude due to surface hydroxylation. The strong chemomechanical effects on the mechanical processes in CaO suggests that minerals with similar structures may exhibit comparable effects, influencing the stability of cements and geomaterials.

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