RI 2377 Storage and Transportation of Portland cement

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 1365 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 1, 1922
Abstract
The U. S. Bureau of Mines conducted an investigation to determine the
cause of the deterioration of Portland cement during storage and transportation ,
and to discover a means of preventing it . All available printed sources of information
on this subject have been examined and a bibliography has been compiled .
The subject has also been discussed with the leaders in the cement industry ; the
present report is the result of their cooperation , and is based principally on
information thus obtained .
Deterioration of Portland cement during storage over any considerable
period of time has long been noted ; closely related to it is deterioration of
cement during transportation, which involves not only the time factor of storage
but also exposure to varied climatic conditions . Deterioration in both cases is
due to hydration of the cement by absorption of moisture from a humid atmosphere ,
or by exposure to actual rain-fall . After hydration cement possesses no cohesive
power ; the degree of deterioration is directly proportional to the degree of
hydration .
The amount of deterioration of Portland cement during storage has been
accurately determined in an investigation by the Structural Materials Research
Laboratory , in cooperation with the Portland Cement Association . Cement stored
in a shed in cloth sacks retained 80 per cent of its original strength after
three months storage ; 71 per cent after six months ; 61 per cent after one year ;
and 40 per cent after two years .
The deterioration of Portland cement during storage and transportation
was noted particularly in France during the World War . Information concerning
cement used by the American Expeditionary Forces was furnished by Lt. Col. H. S.
Spackman and Major E. C. Eckel , U. S. R. , who had charge of practically all
matters concerning cement used by the A. E. F.
The cement used by the A. E. F. came from the following sources : 42,000
tons was French , Swiss , and Spanish cements ; 120,000 tons was English cement ;
55,000 tons made in plants operated by the A.E.F .; 500 tons ( Not over) from
America . Deterioration was most marked in cement from the first source .
Citation
APA:
(1922) RI 2377 Storage and Transportation of Portland cementMLA: RI 2377 Storage and Transportation of Portland cement. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1922.