About Our Products
Portland Cement:
Bricklayer Joseph Aspdin of Leeds, England first made Portland cement early in
the 19th century by burning powdered limestone and clay in his kitchen stove.
By this crude method he laid the foundation for an industry which annually
processes literally mountains of limestone, clay, cement rock, and other
materials into a powder so fine it will pass through a sieve capable of holding
water. Cement is so fine that one pound of cement contains 150 billion grains.
Portland cement, the basic ingredient of concrete, is a closely controlled chemical
combination of calcium, silicon, aluminium, iron and small amounts of other ingredients
to which gypsum is added in the final grinding process to regulate the setting
time of the concrete. Lime and silica make up about 85% of the mass. Common among
the materials used in its manufacture are limestone, shells, and chalk or marl
combined with shale, clay, slate or blast furnace slag, silica sand, and iron
ore.
Each step in manufacture of Portland cement is checked by frequent chemical and
physical tests in plant laboratories. The finished product is also analyzed and
tested to ensure that it complies with all specifications. We at
Grey Powder source only the finest Portland cement to the highest quality spec.
How it is made:
Two different processes, "dry" and "wet," are used in the
manufacture of Portland cement.
When rock is the principal raw material, the first step after quarrying in both
processes is the primary crushing. Mountains of rock are fed through crushers
capable of handling pieces as large as an oil drum. The first crushing reduces
the rock to a maximum size of about 6 inches. The rock then goes to secondary
crushers or hammer mills for reduction to about 3 inches or smaller.
In the wet process, the raw materials, properly proportioned, are then ground
with water, thoroughly mixed and fed into the kiln in the form of "slurry”.
In the dry process, raw materials are ground, mixed, and fed to the kiln in a
dry state. In other respects, the two processes are essentially alike.
The raw material is heated to about 1,450 degrees C in huge cylindrical steel
rotary kilns lined with special firebrick. Kilns are frequently as much as 12
feet in diameter large enough to accommodate an automobile and longer in
many instances than the height of a 40-story building. Kilns are mounted with
the axis inclined slightly from the horizontal. The finely ground raw material
or the slurry is fed into the higher end. At the lower end is a roaring blast
of flame, produced by precisely controlled burning of powdered coal, oil or gas
under forced draft.
As the material moves through the kiln, certain elements are driven off in the
form of gases. The remaining elements unite to form a new substance with new
physical and chemical characteristics. The new substance, called clinker, is
formed in pieces about the size of marbles.
Clinker is discharged red-hot from the lower end of the kiln and generally is
brought down to handling temperature in various types of coolers. The heated
air from the coolers is returned to the kilns, a process that saves fuel and
increases burning efficiency.
The clinker is then put into a ball mill with other additives and ground down to the fine powder we know as cement.
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