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1 Department of Chemistry, University College London, 20 Gordon Street, London
WC1H OAJ, UK and School of Crystallography, Birkbeck College, Malet Street,
London WC1E 7HX, UK
2 Department of Materials, Imperial College, Prince Consort Road, South
Kensington, London SW7 2BP, UK
* E-mail: s.jacques{at}mail.cryst.bbk.ac.uk
The dehydration of pure and waste gypsums has been examined using in
situ synchrotron angle-dispersive X-ray diffraction. Pure gypsum was
studied under a number of defined environments; various industrial waste
gypsums were also studied under a common standard environment. It is found
that the dehydration of gypsum to anhydrite proceeds via the
hemihydrate and
-anhydrite phases and the interplay and behaviour of
these phases has been determined by full structural `Rietveld' refinement. In
the study of the pure gypsum system, the hemihydrate structure is shown to be
preserved as water is lost. A `zero-water hemihydrate' is observed before
refinement in the higher symmetry
-anhydrite cell is possible. The
waste gypsum materials studied showed significant differences in the
temperatures at which key transformation events occurred; these observations
raise implications concerning the re-use of by-product gypsum materials.
Finally, high temperature data are re-examined in the search for a variation
of the anhydrite structure.
KEYWORDS: gypsum, dehydration
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