KUNST
SCHÖNHEIT & WELLNESS
HANDWERK
KULTUR & GESCHICHTE
UNTERHALTUNG
UMFELD
ESSEN & GETRÄNKE
GRÜNE ZUKUNFT
REVERSE ENGINEERING
WISSENSCHAFTEN
SPORT
TECHNOLOGIE
WEARABLES
Making Portland Cement from Limestone and Clay — The Material That Built the Modern World
Gefährlicher Inhalt
Charlie

Erstellt von

Charlie

23. Mai 2026DE
0
0
0
3
0

Making Portland Cement from Limestone and Clay — The Material That Built the Modern World

Portland cement is the most widely used manufactured material on Earth — over four billion tonnes are produced annually, more than any other substance except water. Every concrete road, bridge, dam, skyscraper, and foundation rests on this grey powder that hardens when mixed with water. The name 'Portland' comes from its resemblance, when set, to the prestigious Portland stone quarried on the Isle of Portland in Dorset.

In 1824, Joseph Aspdin, a bricklayer from Leeds, patented a process for making 'an improvement in the modes of producing an artificial stone.' He mixed finely ground limestone with clay, burned the mixture in a kiln, then ground the resulting clinker to a powder. The key insight was that limestone alone (burned to quicklime) only produces a non-hydraulic binder that cannot set underwater. But when clay — which provides silica (SiO₂) and alumina (Al₂O₃) — is intimately mixed with the limestone and fired to high temperature, calcium silicates form that react with water to produce a rock-hard, waterproof mass.

Aspdin's original process used temperatures of approximately 900–1000 °C — sufficient to form calcium silicates (belite, Ca₂SiO₄) but not the more reactive alite (Ca₃SiO₅) that forms at 1450 °C in modern rotary kilns. This lab-scale demonstration follows Aspdin's original approach, producing a genuine hydraulic cement that sets underwater — the defining property that distinguished Portland cement from all previous mortars and plasters.

SAFETY WARNING: The kiln reaches 900–1000 °C — severe burn risk. Cement powder is causite alkaline (pH 12–13) and causes chemical burns on prolonged skin contact. Limestone and clay dust are respiratory irritants. Wear full PPE including heat-resistant gloves for kiln work and a dust mask when grinding.

Erfahren
8–10 hours (plus overnight cooling)

Gefährlicher Inhalt

Dieser Blueprint enthält gefährliche Verfahren. Melden Sie sich an und aktivieren Sie gefährliche Inhalte in Ihren Kontoeinstellungen, um die Schritt-für-Schritt-Anleitung anzuzeigen.

CC0 Gemeinfrei

Dieser Blueprint ist unter CC0 veröffentlicht. Sie dürfen dieses Werk für jeden Zweck frei kopieren, ändern, verbreiten und verwenden, ohne um Erlaubnis zu fragen.

Unterstützen Sie den Maker, indem Sie Produkte über seinen Blueprint kaufen, wo er eine Maker-Provision von Anbietern festgelegt, verdient. Oder erstellen Sie eine neue Iteration dieses Blueprints und verbinden Sie ihn in Ihrem eigenen Blueprint, um Einnahmen zu teilen.

Diskussion

(0)

Anmelden um an der Diskussion teilzunehmen

Kommentare werden geladen...