Dissolution Kinetics of Cubic Tricalcium Aluminate Measured by Digital Holographic Microscopy.
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In situ digital holographic microscopy is used to characterize the dissolution flux of polycrystalline cubic tricalcium aluminate (C3A-c). The surface dissolves at rates that vary considerably with time and spatial location. This implies a statistical distribution of fluxes, but an approximately steady-state median rate was obtained by using flowing solutions and by reducing the water activity in the solution. The dissolution flux from highly crystalline C3A-c depends on the water activity raised to an empirically derived exponent of 5.2 and extrapolates to a median flux of - 2.1 mol m-2 s-1 in pure water with an interquartile range of 3.2 mol m-2 s-1. The flux from a less crystalline source of C3A-c has an empirical water activity exponent of 4.6 and an extrapolated median flux of only -1.4 mol m-2 s-1 in pure water with an interquartile range of 1.9 mol m-2 s-1. These data suggest that the bulk dissolution rate of C3A-c can vary by at least 30% from one source to another and that variability in the local rate within a single material is even greater because of the heterogeneous spatial distribution of structural characteristics (i.e., degree of crystallinity, chemical impurities, and defects).