Continuous, large-scale, and high proportion of bioinspired phosphogypsum composites via reactive extrusion

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Abstract

Biological matter evolution provides an idea for the human design and synthesis of new materials. However, biomimetic materials only stay in laboratory-scale models, and their large-scale industrial applications are yet to be realized. Here, inspired by nacre’s architecture, we report a continuous, large-scale method to fabricate phosphogypsum composites by reactive extrusion strategy. After curing for seven days, with more than 50 wt% of beta-hemihydrate phosphogypsum (β-HPG), the compressive strength and softening coefficient were 24.98 MPa and 0.78, increasing by 110.0% and 20.0%, respectively, compared to the pouring method. The results show that the screw extrusion process can improve the mechanical strength and waterproof properties of β-HPG hydration specimens without any special chemical admixtures and cements.

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Ran, J., Su, X., Zhang, J., Zhang, J., Chen, J., Liu, K., … Jiang, D. (2021). Continuous, large-scale, and high proportion of bioinspired phosphogypsum composites via reactive extrusion. Materials, 14(19). https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14195601

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