Raw Materials
Land Stewardship

Energy and Fuel

 
   
 
 


Raw Materials

For its raw material, cement utilizes four elements for its manufacture: calcium, silicon, aluminum, and iron. The most common combination of ingredients is limestone (for calcium), coupled with much smaller quantities of clay, iron ore, and sand (as sources of alumina, iron, and silica, respectively).

So common are these elements that a wide variety of raw materials are suitable. Cement is made with everything from sea shells and shale to industrial byproducts such as blast-furnace slag from steel plants and fly ash from coal-fired electric power plants. Cement plants are increasingly turning to industrial byproducts that otherwise would be discarded. After completing detailed analyses to determine the effects on product chemistry and facility emissions, many cement plants can utilize byproducts in the manufacture of clinker.

From 115 operating plants reporting in the PCA publication: 2008 U.S. and Canadian Portland Cement Industry:Plant Information Summary, 36 plants used blast furnace or iron slag as a raw material and over 50 plants used fly ash or bottom ash from electric power plants.

portland cement plants that use slag

portland cement plants that use fly ash

Other alternative materials used by portland cement plants in 2006 included:

  • Copper slag
  • Foundry sand
  • Mill scale
  • Synthetic gypsum

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Use of Iron and Steel Byproducts


Use of Iron and Steel Byproducts

Three byproducts of the iron and steel industries can be used in the manufacture of portland cement: foundry sand, mill scale, and slag.

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