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Seaa2112 l2 Cement

The document discusses different types of cement. It describes the raw materials, manufacturing process, chemical composition and hydration process of Portland cement. The main points are: 1) Portland cement is produced by grinding clinker formed from limestone and clay heated to high temperatures. 2) The hydration process involves chemical reactions between cement compounds (C3S, C2S, C3A, C4AF) and water that produce binding compounds. 3) Different types of Portland cement include ordinary, rapid hardening, and sulphate resisting cement used for various applications depending on strength requirements and exposure conditions.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
147 views70 pages

Seaa2112 l2 Cement

The document discusses different types of cement. It describes the raw materials, manufacturing process, chemical composition and hydration process of Portland cement. The main points are: 1) Portland cement is produced by grinding clinker formed from limestone and clay heated to high temperatures. 2) The hydration process involves chemical reactions between cement compounds (C3S, C2S, C3A, C4AF) and water that produce binding compounds. 3) Different types of Portland cement include ordinary, rapid hardening, and sulphate resisting cement used for various applications depending on strength requirements and exposure conditions.

Uploaded by

rawk hahihu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 70

CEMENT

Lecture 2
Concrete Ingredients
At the end of class students should understand…
1) Raw materials in cement
manufacturing process
2) Chemical compositions of
Portland cement and their
functions
3) Hydration process of cement
4) Types of Portland cement and
their applications
Motivational Quote of the Day

"Failure cannot cope with persistence."


Napoleon Hill
Concrete Problem
Read Pages:
1 – 21
(Cement)
CEMENT

Is the product obtained by grinding clinker formed


by burning raw-materials (argillaceous and
calcareous) primarily consisting of lime (CaO),
silicate (SiO2), alumina (Al2O3), and iron oxide (Fe2O3)
History of Portland Cement

• 1824 – patented by Joseph Aspdin


• Materials to produce cement were found and after
manufactured resemble the stone found on the
English Isle of Portland
• Thus, called PORTLAND CEMENT
Characteristics of cement

• Set and harden when mix to a


paste with water
• Cohesive and Adhesive
• A material that binds concrete
ingredients – essentially like
GLUE

14
Cement
• When it is mixed with water it forms a paste,
which hardens and binds aggregates (sand/gravel
and/or crushed rock) together to form a hard
durable mass called concrete
Cement Manufacturing

• Argillaceous (20%) + Calcareous (60%)


Silica (SiO2 -60%) Lime (CaO -20%)
Alumina (Al2O3 -10%)
Ferum oxide (Fe2O3)
Ferum oxide + Alumina = 10%
Others = 10%

Argillaceous – clay, sandstone, shale


Calcareous – limestone, chalk, oyster shells
Common Raw Materials

Raw Materials Compound


Cement rock Lime, Silica, Alumina
Limestone Lime
Chalk Lime
Slag Lime, Silica, Alumina
Oyster shell Lime
Marble Lime
Clay Silica, Alumina, Iron Oxide
Shale Alumina
Fly Ash Silica, Alumina, Lime
Kaolin Alumina
Bauxite Alumina
Sand Silica
Categories of Cement

1) Hydraulic cement – turns into solid or able to set


and harden in the presence of water e.g. OPC

2) Non-Hydraulic cement – requires no water to


transform into solid or harden, only require air to
harden e.g. lime
Manufacturing Process

Two types of process:


• Wet Process – softer materials (clay + chalk)

• Dry Process – harder materials (shale + limestone)


• More efficient and require higher fuel
Steps in manufacturing process

1) Grinding and mixing of raw materials

2) Burning in a rotary kiln

3) Cooling, grinding and sieving

4) Storing, packing and distributing


Wet Process

1) Materials being ground (80% passing 75µm) and


mixed with the correct proportions

2) The mixture in a slurry form (30-40% water) is fed


into a rotary kiln where it is heated/burnt to a
temperature of 1500 °C to form clinker
1. Grinding Raw Materials
2. Mixing

Proportions of ingredients
3. Burning
Calcination process

• 100 °C – water is driven off


• 850 °C – limestone changes to calcium oxide and
CO2 is liberated
• 1500 °C – CaO reacts with SiO2 to form Calcium
Silicate (CS)
• CaO reacts with other compounds to form Calcium
Aluminate (CA) and Calcium Aluminoferite (CAF)
4. Grinding

Why clinker need to be


ground?
Gypsum added (2-3%)
Wet Process

3) Cooling and grinding – Gypsum [Ca(SO)4] is


added (2-3%) during the grinding process to
prevent flash setting

4) Storing – stored in silo/air tight container


Final Products - cement
Dry Process

• The process is relatively the same as wet process


except in dry process the raw materials (harder
materials) are mixed in dry condition.
• Small amount of water is added to form 12mm in
diameter ‘balls’
• The ‘balls’ are burnt in a rotary kiln and the
chemical reactions are the same as wet process
CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF PORTLAND CEMENT

Will affects:
• Strength of cement/mortar/concrete
• Rate of hydration
• Amount of heat of hydration
• Durability of cement/mortar/concrete
Chemical Composition of Portland Cement

Abb. Compound Oxide Percent Reaction


(%) with water
C 3S Tricalcium silicate 3CaO.SiO2 45-60 Medium

C 2S Dicalcium silicate 2Cao.SiO2 15-30 Slow

C 3A Tricalcium 3CaO.Al2O3 6-12 Fast


Aluminate
C4AF Tetracalcium 4CaO.Al2O3.Fe2O3 6-8 Medium
Aluminoferrite
Others 8

31
Others of Minor Compounds

• Magnesium oxide
• Titanium oxide
• Manganese oxide
• Sodium oxide
• Potassium oxide

• Minor – refers to quantity not important


Alkalis in Cement

• Sodium oxide (Na2O) and


Potassium oxide (K2O)

• May cause problem – Alkali


Silica Reaction

33
HYDRATION PROCESS OF PORTLAND CEMENT

• Is the chemical reaction between the compounds


of cement and water that yields products that
achieve the binding property after hardening
• Two stages:
setting and hardening
Setting - cement starts to stiffen
Setting

• Initial setting – when the paste beginning to stiffen


• Final setting - when the paste beginning to harden and
able to carry some loads

• Flash set – rapid development of permanent rigidity of the


cement paste – along with high heat

• False set – rapid development of rigidity without the evolution of


heat, premature stiffening, can be reworked
Set – reaches a state in which its form cannot be changed without rupture
Hydration Process of Cement

Cement + H2O → C-S-H gel + Ca(OH)2


• C3S (50-60% Vol of solid)
• C2S
• C3A
• C4AF

• For complete hydration, it is estimated that 1 g of cement requires 0.32 g of water


(w/c=0.32)
Factors Affecting Rate of Hydration

• Chemical • Amount C3S, C2S, C3A,


compositions C4AF

Finer
• Fineness – measuring
the surface area per
Coarser
unit mass (m2/kg)

38
Hydration of Cement

• It is an exothermic process where heat is liberated


(heat of hydration)

Mass concrete
Cracks
100 ºC 30 ºC

Difference 70 ºC
Hydration of Cement

• The silicates, C3S and C2S (75%), are the most


important compounds, which are responsible for
the strength of the hydrated cement paste

• C3S provides the early strength and liberated


higher heat of hydration (twice compared to C2S)
Hydration of cement
C-S-H gel and Ca(OH)2

C-S-H
gel

Ca(OH)2
Cont.

• C2S reacts slowly, provide later strength, highly


chemical resistance (sulphate, chloride)

• C3A is undesirable, contribute little or nothing to


the strength of cement except at early ages, and
when hardened cement paste is prone to be
attacked by sulphates, forming sulphoaluminate
that may cause disruption in concrete
Hydration of C3A
Cont.

• C4AF does not affect significantly the behaviour of


cement hydration.

• However, it reacts with gypsum to form calcium


sulphoferrite and its presence may accelerate the
hydration of silicates
Hydration Process
Rate of Hydration
Effect on porosity
W/C effect on porosity
Strength vs porosity
Types of Portland Cement

1) Ordinary Portland Cement (OPC) – Type I


2) Rapid Hardening Portland Cememt (RHPC)
3) Sulphate Resisting Portland Cement (SRPC) – Type V
4) Modified Portland Cement (MPC) – Type II
5) Low Heat Portland Cement (LHPC) – Type IV
6) Portland-Blastfurnace Cement (PBC) – Type IS
7) Portland-Pozzolan Cement (PPC) – Type IP
8) Coloured cement
9) Others
Effect of chemical composition

• Cement differing in chemical compositions may


exhibit different properties when hydrated i.e.
Strength, durability, rate of strength gain, heat of
hydration
Ordinary Portland Cement (Type I)

• By far the most common (60%) cement used in


general concrete construction when there is no
exposure to sulphates in the soil or groundwater
• Minimum fineness of 225 m2/kg
• Rate of hardening is moderate
• Standards: BS 12:1991, MS 522,ENV 197-1:1992
• Cement loses
its binding
properties

54
Rapid Hardening Portland Cement (RHPC – Type III)

• Rapid strength gain due to higher C3S content (70%)


• Minimum fineness of 325 m2/kg
• Used when:
formwork is to be removed early for reuse or where sufficient
strength for further construction is required quickly
• Should not be used in mass concrete construction or in
large structural sections because of its higher rate of heat
development that can cause cracking
RHPC (cont.)

• For construction at low temperatures, the use of


RHPC may provide a satisfactory safeguard against
early frost damage

• The setting time and chemical compositions of


RHPC and OPC is relatively the same
Sulphate Resisting Portland Cement (SRPC – Type V)

• This cement has low C3A (3.5%) content so as to avoid sulphate


attack from outside the concrete
• Minimum fineness of 250 m2/kg
• Active salts are magnesium and sodium sulphates – increase in
volume, cause concrete to disintegrate and crack
• Sulphate attack is greatly accelerated if accompanied by wetting
and drying (splash zone)
• The heat develop by SRPC is not much higher than the low-heat
cement, which is an advantage
Sulphate attack

58
Dry

Wet and Dry


Severe damage

Cont. Wet
Less O2
Blended Cement

• Is a combination between Ordinary Portland


Cement (60%) and Pozzolanic materials (40%)
(contains reactive SiO2)

• Blended Cement = OPC + Slag


= OPC + Fly Ash
= OPC + Silica Fume
= OPC + RHA
Portland-Blastfurnace Cement

• Made by inter-grinding or blending Portland cement


clinker with granulated blast-furnace slag
• Known as slag cement
• Slag contains lime, silica and alumina, but not in the same
proportions as in Portland cement
• Minimum fineness of 275 m2/kg
• Early strength are generally lower than OPC but later
strength are similar or even higher
Portland-Blastfurnace Cement

• Typical uses are in mass concrete because of low


heat of hydration and in seawater construction
due to better sulphate resistance ( lower C3A
content) than with the OPC
• The amount of slag replacement between 25 to
70% of the mass of the mixture
Portland-Pozzolan Cement

• Made by inter-grinding or blending pozzolans with


Portland cement
• A pozzolan is a siliceous or siliceous and aluminous
material which itself possesses little or no cementitious
value BUT in finely divided form and in the presence of
moisture, chemically react with Ca(OH)2 liberated during
the hydration of Portland cement to form compounds
possessing cementitious properties
Cont..

• Portland-Pozzolan cement gain strength slowly and


therefore require curing over a comparatively a long
period of time, but the long-term strength is higher
than OPC

• Amount replacement between 25 to 40%

• More durable than OPC


Hydration Process of Blended Cement

• Cement + H2O C-S-H (gel) + Ca(OH)2

• SiO2 + Ca(OH)2 C-S-H (gel)


Normal plain
Concrete with silica concrete
fume

DENSE
CONCRETE
What to consider?

Materials?
Cement?
Type of
construction?
Discussion

• What are the main materials used for the manufacture of


cement?
• What is the purpose of adding gypsum to cement?
• Why cement clinker needs to be ground?
• What are the chemical composition of Portland cement?
• Different types of OPC and applications.
ReCap

• Cement ingredients
• Manufacturing process
• Chemical compositions
• Hydration process
• Types of cement and application
Thank You

help you parents…

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