Manufacture of Portland Cement
Manufacture of Portland Cement
Manufacture of Portland Cement
The raw materials required for manufacture of Portland cement are calcareous
materials, such as limestone or chalk, and argillaceous material such as shale or clay.
The process of manufacture of cement consists of grinding the raw materials, mixing
them intimately in certain proportions depending upon their purity and composition and
burning them in a kiln at a temperature of about 1300 to 1500°C, at which temperature,
the material sinters and partially fuses to form nodular shaped clinker. The clinker is
cooled and ground to fine powder with addition of about 3 to 5% of gypsum. The
product formed by using this procedure is Portland cement.
There are two processes known as “wet” and “dry” processes depending upon whether
the mixing and grinding of raw materials is done in wet or dry conditions. With a little
change in the above process we have the semi-dry process also where the raw
materials are ground dry and then mixed with about 10-14 per cent of water and further
burnt to clinkering temperature.
The dry process requires much less fuel as the materials are already in a dry
state, whereas in the wet process the slurry contains about 35 to 50 per cent water.
WET PROCESS
In the wet process, the limestone brought from the quarries is first crushed to smaller
fragments. Then it is taken to a ball or tube mill where it is mixed with clay or shale as
the case may be and ground to a fine consistency of slurry with the addition of water.
The slurry is a liquid of creamy consistency with water content of about 35 to 50 per
cent, wherein particles, crushed to the fineness of Indian Standard Sieve number 9, are
held in suspension.
The slurry is pumped to slurry tanks or basins where it is kept in an agitated condition
by means of rotating arms with chains or blowing compressed air from the bottom to
prevent settling of limestone and clay particles. The composition of the slurry is tested to
give the required chemical composition and corrected periodically in the tube mill and
also in the slurry tank by blending slurry from different storage tanks. Finally, the
corrected slurry is stored in the final storage tanks and kept in a homogeneous condition
by the agitation of slurry.
The corrected slurry is sprayed on to the upper end of a rotary kiln against hot heavy
hanging chains. The rotary kiln is an important component of a cement factory. It is a
thick steel cylinder of diameter anything from 3 metres to 8 metres, lined with refractory
materials, mounted on roller bearings and capable of rotating about its own axis at a
specified speed.
The length of the rotary kiln may vary anything from 30 metres to 200 metres. The slurry
on being sprayed against a hot surface of flexible chain loses moisture and becomes
flakes. These flakes peel off and fall on the floor. The rotation of the rotary kiln causes
the flakes to move from the upper end towards the lower end of the kiln subjecting itself
to higher and higher temperature. The kiln is fired from the lower end. The fuel is either
powered coal, oil or natural gas. By the time the material rolls down to the lower end of
the rotary kiln, the dry material undergoes a series of chemical reactions until finally, in
the hottest part of the kiln, where the temperature is in the order of 1500°C, about 20 to
30 per cent of the materials get fused.
Lime, silica and alumina get recombined. The fused mass turns into nodular form of size
3 mm to 20 mm known as clinker. The clinker drops into a rotary cooler where it is
cooled under controlled conditions The clinker is stored in silos or bins. The clinker
weighs about 1100 to 1300 gms per litre. The litre weight of clinker indicates the quality
of clinker.
The cooled clinker is then ground in a ball mill with the addition of 3 to 5 per cent of
gypsum in order to prevent flash-setting of the cement. A ball mill consists of several
compartments charged with progressively smaller hardened steel balls. The particles
crushed to the required fineness are separated by currents of air and taken to storage
silos from where the cement is bagged or filled into barrels for bulk supply to dams or
other large work sites.
Chemical Composition
The raw materials used for the manufacture of cement consist mainly of lime, silica,
alumina and iron oxide. These oxides interact with one another in the kiln at high
temperature to form more complex compounds. The relative proportions of these oxide
compositions are responsible for influencing the various properties of cement; in
addition to rate of cooling and fineness of grinding .