Clinker (cement)
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Typical clinker nodules
Hot clinker
In
the manufacture of Portland cement, the term clinker refers to lumps or
nodules, usually 3 millimetres (0.12 in) to 25 millimetres (0.98 in)
in diameter, produced by sintering (fused together
without melting to the point of liquification) limestone and alumino-silicate materials such as clay during the cement kiln stage.
Contents
Clinker
consists of various calcium silicates including alite and belite. Tricalcium
aluminate and calcium aluminoferrite are other common components. These components are often
generated in situ by heating various clays and limestone.[1]
Portland cement clinker is made by heating in a rotary kiln at high temperature a homogeneous mixture of
raw materials. The products of the chemical reaction aggregate together at
their sintering temperature, about 1,450 °C (2,640 °F). Aluminium oxide and iron oxide are present only as a flux to reduce the sintering temperature and
contribute little to the cement strength.
For special cements, such as low heat (LH) andsulfate resistant (SR) types, it is necessary to limit the
amount of tricalcium aluminate formed. The major raw material for the
clinker-making is usually limestone mixed with a second material containing
clay as source of alumino-silicate. Normally, an impure limestone which
contains clay or silicon dioxide (SiO2) is used. The calcium carbonate (CaCO3) content of these limestones
can be as low as 80%. Second raw materials (materials in the rawmix other than limestone) depend on the purity of
the limestone. Some of the second raw materials used are: clay, shale, sand, iron ore, bauxite,fly ash and slag. The clinker surface and its reactions in different
electrolytic solutions are investigated by scanning electron microscope and atomic force microscopy.[2]
Portland
cement clinker is ground to a fine powder and
used as the binder in many cement products. A little gypsum is sometimes added. It may also be combined with other active
ingredients or chemical admixtures to produce other types of cement including:
Clinker,
if stored in dry conditions, can be kept for several months without appreciable
loss of quality. Because of this, and because it can easily be handled by
ordinary mineral handling equipment, clinker is traded internationally in large
quantities. Cement manufacturers purchasing clinker usually grind it as an
addition to their own clinker at their cement plants. Manufacturers also ship
clinker to grinding plants in areas where cement-making raw materials are not
available.
Gypsum
is added to clinker primarily as an additive preventing the flash settings of
the cement, but it is also very effective to facilitate the grinding of clinker by
preventing agglomeration and coating of the powder at the surface of balls and mill wall.
Organic
compounds are also often added as grinding aids to avoid powder agglomeration. Triethanolamine (TEA) is commonly used at 0.1 wt. %
and is proved to be very effective. Other additives are sometimes used, such as ethylene glycol, oleic acid, and dodecyl-benzene sulfonate. [3]
Upon
treatment with water, clinker reacts to form a hydrate called cement paste.
Upon standing the paste polymerizes as indicated by its hardening.
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