Chapter 1 Cement
Chapter 1 Cement
Chapter 1 Cement
Chapter 1
CEMENT
1.1. Types of Cement
1.2. Chemical Composition
1.3. Testing of Cement
1.4. Manufacturing of Cement
1.5. Cement for high performance concrete
Portland cement was patented by Joseph Aspdin in 1824 and was named
after the limestone cliffs on the Isle of Portland in England.
1.1
Types of Cement
Cement is manufactured with two basic raw ingredients called calcareous
and an argillaceous material. The cement in making of concrete has the
property of setting and hardening under water by virtue of chemical
reaction with it and this type of cement is called hydraulic cement.
Calcareous:
The calcareous material is a calcium oxide, such as limestone, chalk, or oyster
shells.
Argillaceous:
Argillaceous is a combination of silica and alumina that can be found from clay,
shale, and blast furnace slag.
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
Setting Time
Setting refers to the stiffening of the cement paste or the
change from a plastic state to a solid state. The setting time
refers to changes of the cement paste from fluid to rigid.
Setting is usually described in two levels namely, initial
setting and final setting.
Initial Setting
Initial setting is defined as the beginning of the noticeable
stiffening in the cement paste and its corresponding to the
rapid rise temperature. This normally takes about 45 175
minutes.
Final Setting Time
This refers to completion of setting which correspond to the
peak temperature in the cement paste. The stiffening of
cement paste increase as the volume of the gel increases and
the stage at which this is completed, the final hardening
process begins. It normally takes between 3 to 10 hours for
this to happen.
Hardening
This is referred to the gained of the strength of the cement
paste. Actually during the setting time, the cement gained very
little strength.
Name of Compound
Usual Abbreviation
Reaction
Tricalcium Silicate
Dicalcium Silicate
Tricalcium Aluminate
Tetracalcium Aluminoferitte
C3S
C2S
C3A
C4AF
Quick
Slow
Very quick
Not very important
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
a. Natural Cement
Natural cements are powders obtained from certain natural rocks (clayey
lime stone type) which are quarried, crushed and processes. Enough
heat is required to dry off carbonic acid gasses. Besides, it is brown in
colour and sets slowly or quickly when mixed with water, depending on
the amount of clay in the limestone. The strength is low and not used for
concrete work.
b. Aluminous Cement
The chief ingredients of aluminous cement are calcareous and
aluminious materials (limestone or chalk and bauxite). These are heated
to a temperature of 1400oC and the whole mass is grinded to powder
form.
c. Portland Cement
The hardening of Portland cement is a chemical process during which
heat is evolved. Modified forms of Portland based on different ratio of four
main compositions are made, to suit the varying demands of different
kinds of structural application.
Table 1.2:
Name
Application
Normal
Moderate Sulfate
Resistance
High Sulfate
Resistance
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
Hydration is chemical reaction between cement particles and water. The features of this reaction are the change in matter, the change i
Tricalcium silicate + Water Calcium silicate hydrates (C-S-H) + Calcium hydroxide
C-S-H makes the hydrated cement paste strong and calcium hydroxide is susceptible to attack by sulfate and acidic water
ii)
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
iii)
iv)
Setting Time
OPC
RHPC
Initial Setting
Time, minutes
(min)
30
30
Final Setting
Time, minutes
(max)
600
600
LHPC
60
600
Cement
Type
v)
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
vi)
vii)
viii)
3 days
13
18
7 days
-
28 days
29
33
PBC
14
22
LHPC
19
SRPC
10
27
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
39%
10%
Lime (CaO)
38%
4%
Silica (SiO2)
6%
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
1.2
Chemical Composition
Several types of cements can be obtained by changing the percentages of
chemical composition. Table 1.5 shows the chemical composition limit of
Portland cement:
Table 1.5: Chemical composition limit of Portland cement
Name of Raw Material
Lime
Silica
Alumina
Iron Oxide
Magnesium
Alkalis (Soda and or/ potash)
Sulphur Trioxide
Chemical Composition
CaO
SiO2
Al2O3
Fe2O3
MgO
Na2O,K2O
SO3
Percentage Limit
60 67
17 25
38
0.5 6
0.1 4
0.2 1.3
1-3
Chemical Formula
Usual Range by
Weight (%)
Tricalcium Silicate
Dicalcium Silicate
Tricalcium Aluminate
Tetracalcium Aluminoferitte
3CaO.SiO2
2CaO.SiO2
3CaO.Al2O3
4CaO.Al2O3.Fe2O3
45 60
15 30
6 12
6-8
1.3
Testing of Cement
1.3.1 Setting
Vicat Set Time Apparatus
Setting time can be determined with the Vicat apparatus. The Vicat test
requires sample of cement using the amount of water required for normal
consistency according to a specified procedure.
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
Procedure:
The 1 mm (0.04in) diameter needle is allowed to penetrate the paste for 30
seconds and the amount of penetration is measured. The penetration
process is repeated every 15 minutes until a penetration of 25 mm (1in) or
less is obtained. By interpolation, the time when a penetration of 25 mm
occurs is determined and recorded as the initial set time. The final set time is
when the needle does not penetrate visibly into the paste.
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
10
Manufacturing of Cement
Production of Portland cement deals with two basic raw ingredients namely
calcareous and argillaceous. These materials are crushed and stored in the
silos. The raw materials, in the desired proportions, are passed through
grinding mill, using either wet or dry process. The ground material is stored
until it can be sent to the kiln.
Modern dry process cement plants use a heat recovery cycle to preheat the
ground material, or feed stock, with the exhaust gas from the kiln. Some
plants use a flash furnace to further heat and feed stock. Both the preheater
Prepared by: Ahmad Fahmy Kamarudin, January 2010
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
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Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
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OPC(SP30)
18
55
8
9
3
3.3
1.1
300
71
120
180
SP30-4A
28
50
5.5
9
1.5-2.0
2-3
0.6
310
56
140
200
SP30-4A MOD
28
50
5.5
9
1.5-2.0
2-3
0.6
400
70
120
170
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
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Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
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Mineral-bound foams with porous structure and low mass density have
stablished themselves in the construction industry. These fine-grained
concretes are based on German standard DIN 4164, which in the meantime
is no longer valid. They have a mass density 2000 kg/m3 and are classified
as lightweight concretes. Subject to the production processes,
mineral-bound foams are called autoclaved aerated concrete or foam
concrete.
Foam is a dispersive system made of gas and liquid and/or gas and solids,
where the proportion of gaseous volume is dominant. With all genuine foams,
each individual bubble represents a cavity closed in itself, with no gas-filled
connections between neighbouring gas bubbles.
By using different grain sizes of the aluminium powder, the air void
distribution in the hardened material was controllable, whereas the air void
volume was adjusted by the total quantity. The water/cement ratio has a
crucial influence on the increase of volume of the cement paste during
expansion.
Binder
Additives
:
:
Plasticizer
Admixtures
:
:
Chapter 1: Cement
1st Ed, Civil Engineering Materials
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Figure 1.6 : Foam concrete polished sections (left: w/c ratio=0.45; right:
w/c ratio=0.35); total image width: 80 mm
.
Tutorial 1