%0 Journal Article %T A review of sodium silicate solutions: Structure, gelation, and syneresis. %A Matinfar M %A Nychka JA %J Adv Colloid Interface Sci %V 322 %N 0 %D 2023 Dec 2 %M 37952363 %F 15.19 %R 10.1016/j.cis.2023.103036 %X Sodium silicate solutions, also known as waterglass, have been found to have remarkable utility in a variety of applications. The cumulative weight of evidence from 70 years of varied analysis indicates that silicate solutions consist of a wide range of species, from monomers through oligomers, up to colloids. Moreover, the structure and distribution of these species are greatly dependent upon many parameters, such as solute concentrations, silica to alkali ratio, pH, and temperature. The most interesting and characteristic property of silicate solutions is their ability to form silica gels. Overall, despite extensive research using different spectroscopic and scattering techniques, many questions related to sodium silicate's dynamic structure, stability, polymerization, and gelation remain difficult to answer. The multitude of simultaneous reactions which restructure the silicate species at the atomic scale in response to variation in solution and environmental parameters, makes it difficult to investigate the individual events using only experimental data. Molecular modelling provides an alternative way to study the unknown areas in the aqueous silicate and silica gel systems, generating key insights into the chemical reactions at microscopic length scales. However, sufficient sampling remains a challenge for the practical use of molecular simulation for these systems. Based on both experimental and modelling studies, this review provides a detailed discussion over the structure and speciation of sodium silicate solutions, their gelation mechanism and kinetics, and the syneresis phenomenon. The goal is not only to review the current level of understanding of sodium silicate solutions, silica gels and characterization techniques suitable for studying them, but also to identify the gaps in the literature and open up opportunities for advancing knowledge about these complex systems. We believe that the future direction of research should be toward correlating atomistic, molecular, and meso-scale level details of interactions and reactions in silicate solution and establishing a fundamental understanding of its gelation mechanism and kinetics. We believe that this knowledge could eliminate the "trial and error" approach in manufacturing, and improve structural control in the synthesis of important materials derived from these solutions, such as silica gels and zeolites.