Dictionary Definition
cement
Noun
1 concrete pavement is sometimes referred to as
cement; "they stood on the gray cement beside the pool"
2 a building material that is a powder made of a
mixture of calcined limestone and clay; used with water and sand or
gravel to make concrete and mortar
3 something that hardens to act as adhesive
material
4 any of various materials used by dentists to
fill cavities in teeth
5 a specialized bony substance covering the root
of a tooth [syn: cementum]
Verb
1 make fast as if with cement; "We cemented our
friendship"
2 cover or coat with cement
3 bind or join with or as if with cement
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
Derived terms
Translations
a powdered substance
- Croatian: cement
- Czech: cement
- Finnish: sementti
- German: Zement
- Italian: cemento
- Kurdish: چهمهنتۆ
- Russian: цемент
- Spanish: cemento
the paste-like substance
- Croatian: cement
- Finnish: sementti
- French: ciment
- German: Zement
- Italian: adesivo
- Kurdish: چهمهنتۆ
- Russian: цемент
- Spanish: pegamento
any material with strong adhesive properties
- Finnish: liima
- German: Zement
- Italian: adesivo
- Kurdish: چهمهنتۆ
- Portuguese:
- Spanish: pegamento
a particular type or brand of cement
- ttbc Interlingua: cemento
- ttbc Ido: cemento
- Volapük: zäm
See also
Translations
to affix with cement
- Russian: цементировать
to ensure an outcome
- ttbc French: cimenter
- ttbc German: zementieren
- ttbc Interlingua: cementar
- ttbc Italian: cementare
- ttbc Portuguese: cimentar
- ttbc Spanish: cementar
- Volapük: zämön
Czech
Noun
Swedish
Noun
cementExtensive Definition
In the most general sense of the word, a cement
is a binder, a substance which sets and hardens independently, and
can bind other materials together. The name "cement" goes back to
the Romans who used the term "opus caementitium" to describe
masonry which resembled concrete and was made from crushed rock
with burnt lime as binder. The volcanic ash and pulverized brick
additives which were added to the burnt lime to obtain a hydraulic
binder were later referred to as cementum, cimentum, cäment and
cement. Cements used in construction are characterized as hydraulic
or non-hydraulic.
The most important use of cement is the
production of mortar
and concrete - the
bonding of natural or artificial aggregates to form a strong
building material which is durable in the face of normal
environmental effects.
Hydraulic vs. non-hydraulic cement
Hydraulic cements are materials that set and harden after being combined with water, as a result of chemical reactions with the mixing water, and that, after hardening, retain strength and stability even under water. The key requirement for this strength and stability is that the hydrates formed on immediate reaction with water be essentially insoluble in water. Most construction cements today are hydraulic, and most of these are based on Portland cement, which is made primarily from limestone, certain clay minerals, and gypsum in a high temperature process that drives off carbon dioxide and chemically combines the primary ingredients into new compounds. Non-hydraulic cements include such materials as (non-hydraulic) lime and gypsum plasters, which must be kept dry in order to gain strength, and oxychloride cements, which have liquid components. Lime mortars, for example, "set" only by drying out, and gain strength only very slowly by absorption of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to re-form calcium carbonate through carbonatation.Setting and hardening of hydraulic cements is
caused by the formation of water-containing compounds, which form
as a result of reactions between cement components and water. The
reaction and the reaction products are referred to as hydration and
hydrates or hydrate phases, respectively. As a result of the
immediate start of the reactions, a stiffening can be observed
which is initially slight but which increases with time. The point
at which the stiffening reaches a certain level is referred to as
the start of setting. Further consolidation is called setting,
after which the phase of hardening begins. The compressive strength
of the material then grows steadily, over a period that ranges from
a few days in the case of "ultra-rapid-hardening" cements to
several years in the case of ordinary cements.
History
Early uses
The earliest construction cements are as old as construction, and were non-hydraulic. Wherever primitive mud bricks were used, they were bedded together with a thin layer of clay slurry. Mud-based materials were also used for rendering on the walls of timber or wattle and daub structures. Lime was probably used for the first time as an additive in these renders, and for stabilizing mud floors. A "daub" consisting of mud, cow dung and lime produces a tough and coating, due to coagulation, by the lime, of proteins in the cow dung. This simple system was common in Europe until quite recent times. With the advent of fired bricks, and their use in larger structures, various cultures started to experiment with higher-strength mortars based on bitumen (in Mesopotamia), gypsum (in Egypt) and lime (in many parts of the world).It is uncertain where it was first discovered
that a combination of hydrated non-hydraulic lime and a pozzolan produces a hydraulic
mixture, but concrete made from such mixtures was first used on a
large scale by the Romans. They used both natural pozzolans
(trass or pumice) and artificial pozzolans
(ground brick or pottery) in these concretes. Many excellent
examples of structures made from these concretes are still
standing, notably the huge monolithic dome of the Pantheon
in Rome. The use of structural concrete disappeared in medieval
Europe, although weak pozzolanic concretes continued to be used as
a core fill in stone walls and columns.
Modern cement
Modern hydraulic cements began to be developed from the start of the Industrial Revolution (around 1700), driven by three main needs:- Hydraulic renders for finishing brick buildings in wet climates
- Hydraulic mortars for masonry construction of harbor works etc, in contact with sea water.
- Development of strong concretes.
John Smeaton
made an important contribution to the development of cements when
he was planning the construction of the third Eddystone
Lighthouse (1755-9) in the English Channel. He needed a
hydraulic mortar that would set and develop some strength in the
twelve hour period between successive high tides. He performed an
exhaustive market research on the available hydraulic limes,
visiting their production sites, and noted that the "hydraulicity"
of the lime was directly related to the clay content of the
limestone from which it was made. Smeaton was a civil
engineer by profession, and took the idea no further.
Apparently unaware of Smeaton's work, the same principle was
identified by Louis Vicat
in the first decade of the nineteenth century. Vicat went on to
devise a method of combining chalk and clay into an intimate
mixture, and, burning this, produced an "artificial cement" in
1817. James Frost,
working in Britain, produced what he called "British cement" in a
similar manner around the same time, but did not obtain a patent
until 1822. In 1824, Joseph
Aspdin patented a similar material, which he called Portland
cement, because the render made from it was in color similar to the
prestigious Portland
stone.
All the above products could not compete with
lime/pozzolan concretes because of fast-setting (giving
insufficient time for placement) and low early strengths (requiring
a delay of many weeks before formwork could be removed). Hydraulic
limes, "natural" cements and "artificial" cements all rely upon
their belite content for
strength development. Belite develops strength slowly. Because they
were burned at temperatures below 1250 °C, they contained no
alite, which is
responsible for early strength in modern cements. The first cement
to consistently contain alite was that made by Joseph Aspdin's son
William in
the early 1840s. This was what we call today "modern" Portland
cement. Because of the air of mystery with which William Aspdin
surrounded his product, others (e.g. Vicat and I C
Johnson) have claimed precedence in this invention, but recent
analysis of both his concrete and raw cement have shown that
William Aspdin's product made at Northfleet,
Kent was a
true alite-based cement. However, Aspdin's methods were
"rule-of-thumb": Vicat is responsible for establishing the chemical
basis of these cements, and Johnson established the importance of
sintering the mix in the kiln.
William Aspdin's innovation was counter-intuitive
for manufacturers of "artificial cements", because they required
more lime in the mix (a problem for his father), because they
required a much higher kiln temperature (and therefore more fuel)
and because the resulting clinker was very hard and rapidly wore
down the millstones which were the only available grinding
technology of the time. Manufacturing costs were therefore
considerably higher, but the product set reasonably slowly and
developed strength quickly, thus opening up a market for use in
concrete. The use of concrete in construction grew rapidly from
1850 onwards, and was soon the dominant use for cements. Thus
Portland cement began its predominant role.
Types of modern cement
Portland cement
Cement is made by heating limestone with small quantities of other materials (such as clay) to 1450°C in a kiln. The resulting hard substance, called ‘clinker’, is then ground with a small amount of gypsum into a powder to make ‘Ordinary Portland Cement’, the most commonly used type of cement (often referred to as OPC).Portland cement is a basic ingredient of concrete, mortar
and most non-speciality grout. The most common use for
Portland cement is in the production of concrete. Concrete is a
composite material consisting of aggregate
(gravel and sand), cement, and water. As a construction material,
concrete can be cast in almost any shape desired, and once
hardened, can become a structural (load bearing) element. Portland
cement may be gray or white.
For details of the manufacture of Portland
cement, see the main article. The man who first invented Portland
Cement was from Wakefield, West Yorkshire.
Portland cement blends
These are often available as inter-ground mixtures from cement manufacturers, but similar formulations are often also mixed from the ground components at the concrete mixing plant.Portland Blastfurnace Cement contains up to 70%
ground granulated blast furnace slag, with the rest Portland
clinker and a little gypsum. All compositions produce high ultimate
strength, but as slag content is increased, early strength is
reduced, while sulfate resistance increases and heat evolution
diminishes. Used as an economic alternative to Portland
sulfate-resisting and low-heat cements.
Portland Flyash Cement contains up to 30%
fly ash.
The flyash is pozzolanic, so that ultimate strength is maintained.
Because flyash addition allows a lower concrete water content,
early strength can also be maintained. Where good quality cheap
flyash is available, this can be an economic alternative to
ordinary Portland cement.
Portland Pozzolan Cement includes fly ash cement,
since fly ash is a pozzolan, but also includes cements made from
other natural or artificial pozzolans. In countries where volcanic
ashes are available (e.g. Italy, Chile, Mexico, the Philippines)
these cements are often the most common form in use.
Portland Silica Fume cement. Addition of silica fume
can yield exceptionally high strengths, and cements containing
5-20% silica fume are occasionally produced. However, silica fume
is more usually added to Portland cement at the concrete
mixer.
Masonry Cements are used for preparing
bricklaying mortars
and stuccos, and must
not be used in concrete. They are usually complex proprietary
formulations containing Portland clinker and a number of other
ingredients that may include limestone, hydrated lime, air
entrainers, retarders, waterproofers and coloring agents. They are
formulated to yield workable mortars that allow rapid and
consistent masonry work. Subtle variations of Masonry cement in the
US are Plastic Cements and Stucco Cements. These are designed to
produce controlled bond with masonry blocks.
Expansive Cements contain, in addition to
Portland clinker, expansive clinkers (usually sulfoaluminate
clinkers), and are designed to offset the effects of drying
shrinkage that is normally encountered with hydraulic cements. This
allows large floor slabs (up to 60 m square) to be prepared without
contraction joints.
White blended cements may be made using white
clinker and white supplementary materials such as high-purity
metakaolin.
Colored cements are used for decorative purposes.
In some standards, the addition of pigments to produce "colored
Portland cement" is allowed. In other standards (e.g. ASTM),
pigments are not allowed constituents of Portland cement, and
colored cements are sold as "blended hydraulic cements".
Very finely ground cements are made from mixtures
of cement with sand or with slag or other pozzolan type minerals
which are extremely finely ground. Such cements can have the same
physical characteristics as normal cement but with 50% less cement
particularly due to there increased surface area for the chemical
reaction. Even with intensive grinding they can use up to 50% less
energy to fabricate than ordinary Portland cements. EMC Cement
Non-Portland hydraulic cements
Pozzolan-lime cements. Mixtures of ground
pozzolan
and lime are the cements used by the Romans, and are to be found in
Roman structures still standing (e.g. the Pantheon in Rome). They
develop strength slowly, but their ultimate strength can be very
high. The hydration products that produce strength are essentially
the same as those produced by Portland cement.
Slag-lime cements.
Ground granulated blast furnace slag is not hydraulic on its
own, but is “activated” by addition of alkalis, most economically
using lime. They are similar to pozzolan lime cements in their
properties. Only granulated slag (i.e. water-quenched, glassy slag)
is effective as a cement component.
Supersulfated cements. These contain about 80%
ground granulated blast furnace slag, 15% gypsum or anhydrite and a
little Portland clinker or lime as an activator. They produce
strength by formation of ettringite, with strength
growth similar to a slow Portland cement. They exhibit good
resistance to aggressive agents, including sulfate.
Calcium
aluminate cements are hydraulic cements made primarily from
limestone and bauxite. The active ingredients are monocalcium
aluminate CaAl2O4 (CA in Cement
chemist notation) and Mayenite Ca12Al14O33 (C12A7 in CCN).
Strength forms by hydration to calcium aluminate hydrates. They are
well-adapted for use in refractory (high-temperature resistant)
concretes, e.g. for furnace linings.
Calcium sulfoaluminate cements are made from
clinkers that include ye’elimite
(Ca4(AlO2)6SO4 or C4A3\bar \mathrm in Cement
chemist’s notation) as a primary phase. They are used in
expansive cements, in ultra-high early strength cements, and in
"low-energy" cements. Hydration produces ettringite, and
specialized physical properties (such as expansion or rapid
reaction) are obtained by adjustment of the availability of calcium
and sulfate ions. Their use as a low-energy alternative to Portland
cement has been pioneered in China, where several million tonnes
per year are produced. Energy requirements are lower because of the
lower kiln temperatures required for reaction, and the lower amount
of limestone (which must be endothermically decarbonated) in the
mix. In addition, the lower limestone content and lower fuel
consumption leads to a CO2 emission around half that associated
with Portland clinker. However, SO2 emissions are usually
significantly higher.
“Natural” Cements correspond to certain cements
of the pre-Portland era, produced by burning argillaceous
limestones at moderate temperatures. The level of clay
components in the limestone (around 30-35%) is such that large
amounts of belite (the low-early strength, high-late strength
mineral in Portland cement) are formed without the formation of
excessive amounts free lime. As with any natural material, such
cements have very variable properties.
Geopolymer
cements are made from mixtures of water-soluble alkali metal
silicates and aluminosilicate mineral powders such as fly ash and
metakaolin.
Environmental and social impacts
Cement manufacture causes environmental impacts at all stages of the process. These include emissions of airborne pollution in the form of dust, gases, noise and vibration when operating machinery and during blasting in quarries, and damage to countryside from quarrying. Equipment to reduce dust emissions during quarrying and manufacture of cement is widely used, and equipment to trap and separate exhaust gases are coming into increased use. Environmental protection also includes the re-integration of quarries into the countryside after they have been closed down by returning them to nature or re-cultivating them.Climate
Cement manufacture contributes greenhouse gases both directly through the production of carbon dioxide when calcium carbonate is heated, producing lime and carbon dioxide http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/1605/ggrpt/carbon.html, and also indirectly through the use of energy, particularly if the energy is sourced from fossil fuels. The cement industry produces 5% of global man-made CO2 emissions, of which 50% is from the chemical process, and 40% from burning fuel. The amount of CO2 emitted by the cement industry is nearly 900 kg of CO2 for every 1000 kg of cement produced.Fuels and raw materials
A cement plant consumes 3,000 to 6,500 MJ of fuel per tonne of clinker produced, depending on the raw materials and the process used. Most cement kilns today use coal and petroleum coke as primary fuels, and to a lesser extent natural gas and fuel oil. Selected waste and by-products with recoverable calorific value can be used as fuels in a cement kiln, replacing a portion of conventional fossil fuels, like coal, if they meet strict specifications. Selected waste and by-products containing useful minerals such as calcium, silica, alumina, and iron can be used as raw materials in the kiln, replacing raw materials such as clay, shale, and limestone. Because some materials have both useful mineral content and recoverable calorific value, the distinction between alternative fuels and raw materials is not always clear. For example, sewage sludge has a low but significant calorific value, and burns to give ash containing minerals useful in the clinker matrix.Local impacts
Producing cement has significant positive and negative impacts at a local level. On the positive side, the cement industry may create employment and business opportunities for local people, particularly in remote locations in developing countries where there are few other opportunities for economic development. Negative impacts include disturbance to the landscape, dust and noise, and disruption to local biodiversity from quarrying limestone (the raw material for cement).Cement business
In 2002 the world production of hydraulic cement was 1,800 million metric tons. The top three producers were China with 704, India with 100, and the United States with 91 million metric tons for a combined total of about half the world total by the world's three most populous states."For the past 18 years, China consistently has
produced more cement than any other country in the world. [...]
China's cement export peaked in 1994 with 11 million tons shipped
out and has been in steady decline ever since. Only 5.18 million
tons were exported out of China in 2002. Offered at $34 a ton,
Chinese cement is pricing itself out of the market as Thailand is
asking as little as $20 for the same quality."
"Demand for cement in China is expected to
advance 5.4% annually and exceed 1 billion metric tons in 2008,
driven by slowing but healthy growth in construction expenditures.
Cement consumed in China will amount to 44% of global demand, and
China will remain the world's largest national consumer of cement
by a large margin."
In 2006 it was estimated that China manufactured
1.235 billion metric tons of cement, which is 44% of the world
total cement production.
External links
- British Cement Association (UK)
- Cembureau (EU)
- Portland Cement Association (US)
- Verein Deutscher Zementwerke e. V. (VDZ), (Germany)
- Carbon dioxide emission from the global cement industry (in 1994)
- International cement industry Sustainability Initiative
- How is Cement Made? Flash Animation
- Dictionary of Civil Engineering
Further reading
- Friedrich W. Locher: Cement : Principles of production and use, Duesseldorf, Germany: Verlag Bau + Technik GmbH, 2006, ISBN 3-7640-0420-7
- Javed I. Bhatty, F. MacGregor Miller, Steven H. Kosmatka; editors: Innovations in Portland Cement Manufacturing, SP400, Portland Cement Association, Skokie, Illinois, USA, 2004, ISBN 0-89312-234-3
- "Cement Industry Is at Center of Climate Change Debate" article by Elizabeth Rosenthal in the New York Times October 26, 2007
References
cement in Arabic: إسمنت
cement in Bengali: সিমেন্ট
cement in Min Nan: Liâm-ha̍p-che
cement in Bulgarian: Цимент
cement in Catalan: Ciment
cement in Czech: Cement
cement in Danish: Cement
cement in German: Zement
cement in Estonian: Tsement
cement in Spanish: Cemento
cement in Esperanto: Cemento
cement in Persian: سیمان
cement in French: Ciment
cement in Croatian: Cement
cement in Indonesian: Semen
cement in Italian: Cemento (edilizia)
cement in Hebrew: צמנט
cement in Swahili (macrolanguage): Saruji
cement in Latvian: Cements
cement in Lithuanian: Cementas
cement in Malay (macrolanguage): Simen
cement in Dutch: Cement
cement in Japanese: セメント
cement in Norwegian: Sement
cement in Norwegian Nynorsk: Sement
cement in Polish: Cement
cement in Portuguese: Cimento
cement in Russian: Цемент
cement in Simple English: Cement
cement in Serbian: Цемент
cement in Finnish: Sementti
cement in Swedish: Cement
cement in Tamil: சிமெந்து
cement in Thai: ซีเมนต์
cement in Turkish: Çimento
cement in Ukrainian: Цемент (будівельний
матеріал)
cement in Chinese: 水泥
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Tarmac,
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blacktop, bond, bone, bony, bowl, bracket, bramble, braze, brick, bricks and mortar, bridge, bridge over, brier, bulldog, burr, carpet, causeway, cemental, ceramic ware,
ceramics, chain, china, cinch, clamp, clap together, clinch, cling, clinker, cobble, cobblestone, cohere, collect, combine, comprise, concatenate, concrete, conglobulate, conjoin, conjugate, connect, copulate, corneous, couple, cover, covering materials,
cramp, crock, crockery, curb, curbing, curbstone, decal, decalcomania, dense, diamond, diamondlike, dure, edgestone, embrace, enamelware, encompass, engraft, fasten, ferroconcrete, firebrick, fix, flag, flagging, flagstone, flint, flintlike, flinty, floor, flooring, fuse, gather, glass, glue, graft, granite, granitelike, granitic, grapple, gravel, grout, gum, gunk, hard, hard as nails, hardhearted, heart of oak,
hold, horny, include, iron, iron-hard, ironlike, join, jug, kerb, kerbstone, knit, knot, lapideous, lath and plaster,
lay together, league,
leech, limpet, link, lithoid, lithoidal, lump together,
macadam, make fast,
marble, marblelike, marry, marshal, masonry, mass, mastic, merge, metal, mobilize, molasses, moor, mortar, mucilage, nails, oak, obdurate, osseous, pair, parget, paste, pave, pavement, pavestone, paving, paving material, paving
stone, pebble, piece
together, plaster,
plasters, porcelain, pot, pottery, prestressed concrete,
prickle, put to, put
together, refractory,
remora, resistant, resistive, road metal,
rock, rocklike, rocky, roll into one, roofage, roofing, roughcast, screw up, secure, set, set to, siding, solder, solid, span, splice, steel, steellike, steely, stick, stick together, sticker, stone, stonelike, stony, stucco, syrup, take in, tape, tar, tarmacadam, thorn, tie, tighten, tile, tiling, tough, trice up, trim, unify, unite, urn, vase, walling, washboard, weld, yoke