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CEMENT

http://www.tancem.com/images/inner/projects/gemini.jpg

Stephanie M. Murillo Maikut

http://www.math.lsu.edu/~bogdan/photo-albums/poland-poznan/square-town-houses.jpg
INTRODUCTION
Definition: “Cement is a crystalline compound of
calcium silicates and other calcium compounds
having hydraulic properties” (Macfadyen, 2006).
History
Lime and clay have been used as
cementing material on constructions
through many centuries.

Romans are commonly given the credit


for the development of hydraulic cement,
the most significant incorporation of the
Roman’s was the use of pozzolan-lime
cement by mixing volcanic ash from the
Mt. Vesuvius with lime.
Best know surviving example is the
Pantheon in Rome

In 1824 Joseph Aspdin from England


invented the Portland cement

(http://www.holcim.com/NZ/EN/id/71772/mod/gnm20/page/editorial.htm)
(http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1152/2005-1152.pdf)
http://www.artchive.com/artchive/r/roman/roman_pantheon.jpg
Types of Cement

Cements are considered hydraulic because of their ability to set and harden
under or with excess water through the hydration of the cement’s chemical
compounds or minerals
There are two types:
Those that activate with the addition of water
And pozzolanic that develop hydraulic properties when the interact
with hydrated lime Ca(OH)2

Pozzolanic: any siliceous material that develops hydraulic cementitious properties when
interacted with hydrated lime.

HYDRAULIC CEMENTS:
Hydraulic lime: Only used in specialized mortars. Made from calcination of clay-
rich limestones.

Natural cements: Misleadingly called Roman. It is made from argillaceous


limestones or interbedded limestone and clay or shale, with few raw materials.
Because they were found to be inferior to portland, most plants switched.

(http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1152/2005-1152.pdf)
Portland cement: Artificial cement. Made by the mixing clinker with gypsum
in a 95:5 ratio.

Portland-limestone cements: Large amounts (6% to 35%) of ground


limestone have been added as a filler to a portland cement base.

Blended cements: Mix of portland cement with one or more SCM


(supplementary cemetitious materials) like pozzolanic additives.

Pozzolan-lime cements: Original Roman cements. Only a small quantity is


manufactured in the U.S. Mix of pozzolans with lime.

Masonry cements: Portland cement where other materials have been added
primarily to impart plasticity.

Aluminous cements: Limestones and bauxite are the main raw materials.
Used for refractory applications (such as cementing furnace bricks) and certain
applications where rapid hardening is required. It is more expensive than portland.
There is only one producing facility in the U.S.

(http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1152/2005-1152.pdf)
(Macfadyen, 2006).
GEOLOGY (RAW MATERIALS)
The fundamental chemical compounds to produce cement clinker are:
•Lime (CaO)
•Silica (SiO2)
•Alumina (Al2O3)
•Iron Oxide (Fe2O3)

Raw materials used in the production of clinker cement

Fly ash: by-product of burning finely grounded coal either for industrial application or in
the production of electricity

(Macfadyen, 2006)
(Hoffman, 2006)
Clinker compounds in Type I portland cement

(Macfadyen, 2006)
www.recycleworks.org/images/flyash_concrete.gif
SOURCES OF CaCO3

Sedimentary deposits of marine origin (limestone)


Marble (metamorphosed limestone)
Chalk
Marl
Coral
Aragonite
Oyster and clam shells
Travertine
Tuff

LIMESTONES
Originate from the biological deposition of shells and skeletons of plants and animals.

Massive beds accumulated over millions of years.

In the cement industry limestone includes calcium carbonate and magnesium carbonate.
Most industrial quality limestones is of biological origin.

The ideal cement rock 77 to 78% CaCO3, 14% SiO2, 2.5% Al2O3, and 1.75% FeO3.
Limestone with lower content of CaCO3 and higher content of alkalis and magnesia
requires blending with high grade limestone

(Macfadyen, 2006)
(Kussmaul, 2003)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Limestoneshale7342.jpg
SOURCES OF ARGILLACEOUS MINERALS

Argillaceous mineral resources:


Clay and shale for alumina and silica
Iron ore for iron

Other natural sources of silica are and alumina are:


Loess, silt, sandstone, volcanic ash, diaspore, diatomite, bauxite

Shales, mudstones, and sandstones are typically interbedded with the


limestone and were deposited as the inland waters and oceans covered the
land masses. Clays are typically younger surface deposits

(Macfadyen, 2006)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:ShaleUSGOV.jpg
MARKETING
Wide distribution of plants minimizes the
cost to customers.

In any market even though cement must


meet certain specifications there are other
factors that dominate, such as:
Delivered cost
Quality
Product consistency
Technical assistance and
Sales relationship with the user
companies

Factors that drive the consumption of cement


in the marketplace

Economic growth
Private and governmental capital
investment
Population growth

(Macfadyen, 2006)
MINING METHODS
Limestone deposits are mainly extracted by bench mining
in which holes are charged with ammonium nitrate and
fuel oil explosive and blasted

The rock is excavated with front end loaders (10 m3


capacity) and loaded into 70 to 90 tons haul trucks and
then transported to the primary crusher

Marl and chalk normally do not require blasting.

A trend is to use in pit moveable primary crushers and


belt conveyors to transport the rock to a fixed secondary
crusher, thereby reducing the number of trucks and
haulage distance

Underground mining of limestones is not typical, in the


U.S one plant obtains its limestone from underground
operation, using room and pillar mining method.

Clay and shale normally extracted using front end loaders


and loaded into haul trucks.

When they occur as overburden the clays and shales not


used are stored and often reused for reclamation in the
mined out areas of the quarry
(Macfadye, 2006)
http://www.heta4.com/imagesandgraphics/images/frontendloade
PROCESSING
(Macfadyen, 2006)
USES
Uses

Main use is in the fabrication of concrete and mortars

Modern uses
Building (floors, beams, columns, roofing, piles, bricks, mortar, panels, plaster)
Transport (roads, pathways, crossings, bridges, viaducts, tunnels, parking, etc.)
Water (pipes, drains, canals, dams, tanks, pools, etc.)
Civil (piers, docks, retaining walls, silos, warehousing, poles, pylons, fencing)
Agriculture (buildings, processing, housing, irrigation)

(http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1152/2005-1152.pdf)
(http://www.holcim.com/NZ/EN/id/71772/mod/gnm20/page/editorial.
html)
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortar_%28masonry%29)
http://www.wpclipart.com/working/construction/concrete_block.png
http://irandaily.ir/1383/2116/html/005991.jpg
SUBSTITUTES
It competes in the construction industry with concrete substitutes:
Alumina
Asphalt
Clay brick
Fiberglass
Glass
Steel
Stone Wood

Some materials like fly ash and ground granulated furnace slugs have
good hydraulic properties and are being used as partial substitutes for
portland cement in some concrete applications

(http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/cement/cemenmcs07.pdf)
PRODUCTION

Data in thousand metric tons


http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/cement/cemenmcs06.p
http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/cement/cemenmcs07.pdf
World production of hydraulic cement by region

(http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1152/2005-1152.pdf).
U.S production and consumption of portland cement

(http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1152/2005-1152.pdf)
RESOURCES

Although individual company reserves are subject to


exhaustion, cement raw materials (especially limestone) are
widespread and abundant, and overall shortages are unlikely
in the future

(http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/cement/cemenmcs07.pdf)
REFERENCES
Hoffman, G., 2006: Pozzolans and supplementary cementitious materials. Pages 1161-
1172 in Industrial Minerals and Rocks 7th edition. Edited by J.E. Kogel, N.C., Trivedi,
J.M. Barker & S.T. Krudowski. Littleton, Colorado: SME
Macfadyen, J.D., 2006: Cement and cement raw materials. Pages 1121-1136 in
Industrial Minerals and Rocks 7th edition. Edited by J.E. Kogel, N.C., Trivedi, J.M.
Barker & S.T. Krudowski. Littleton, Colorado: SME
http://www.holcim.com/NZ/EN/id/71772/mod/gnm20/page/editorial.htm [
Consulted April 2007]
http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1152/2005-1152.pdf [Consulted April 2007]
http://www.artchive.com/artchive/r/roman/roman_pantheon.jpg [Consulted April
2007]
http://www.recycleworks.org/images/flyash_concrete.gif [Consulted April 2007]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Limestoneshale7342.jpg [Consulted April 2007]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:ShaleUSGOV.jpg [Consulted April 2007]
http://www.heta4.com/imagesandgraphics/images/frontendloader.gif [Consulted
April 2007]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortar_%28masonry%29 [Consulted April 2007]
http://www.wpclipart.com/working/construction/concrete_block.png [Consulted April
2007]
http://irandaily.ir/1383/2116/html/005991.jpg [Consulted April 2007]
http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/cement/cemenmcs06.pdf [
Consulted April 2007]\
http://minerals.usgs.gov/minerals/pubs/commodity/cement/cemenmcs07.pdf [
Consulted April 2007]

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