Bag om Portland Cement Technology 2nd Edition
Contents -
Introduction -
History of the Cement Industry -
Raw Materials -
Proportioning Raw Materials -
Preparing the Raw Mix -
Fuels -
Clinkering -
Power -
Grinding the Clinker -
Storing, Packing, Loading, Shipping -
Plant Design -
Experimental Engineering -
The Nature of Cement -
Analyses and Tests -
Uniformity -
The Nonaqueous Liquid Process -
The Counter-Cyclone Clinkerer -
Research in Science and in Engineering -
Concrete Materials -
Proportioning Materials for Concrete -
Concrete Technology -
Some Concrete Accomplishments -
The Iris Color Process -
Miscellany -
Index -
INTRODUCTION -
Select some raw materials, proportion them, grind, heat,
cool, and grind again. Reduced to simplest terms, this is the
process for manufacturing portland cement. Mixing the cement,
thus produced, with aggregates and water results in
mortar or concrete, to obtain which cement is manufactured.
What raw materials should be selected? How are they proportioned?
How finely are they ground? To what temperature
are they heated? The attempt is made to answer these
and many other somewhat similar questions, on the basis of
the information now available in the industry. The acquisition
of this information has resulted from the manufacture
of portland cement for well over a century, from research,
and from numerous trial and error procedures.
This is a practical text and reference book. It is written
for persons, technical and non-technical, inside and outside
the cement and concrete industries, and in fact for everyone
sufficiently interested in cement to reach for a book on the
subject. Theoretical considerations have been kept at the
minimum, consistent with a clear understanding of the subject.
In conformity with the same policy, the number of formulas
and tables has been restricted in the interest of continuity
of the text. To some extent, references have been
substituted for them. There would have been no difficulty in
writing a book that is nearly all formulas and tables, with
only sufficient other material to hold them together. There
is available such a large mass of data of all kinds that any
type of book could be prepared.
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