'Pozzolana', also known as pozzolanic ash, is a fine, sandy
volcanic ash, originally discovered and dug in
Italy at
Pozzuoli in the region around
Vesuvius, but later at a number of other sites.
Vitruvius speaks of four types of pozzolana. It is found in all the volcanic areas of Italy in various colours: black, white, grey and red.
Finely ground and mixed with
lime it creates a hydraulic
cement and can be used to make a strong
mortar that will also set under water. It transformed the possibilities for making
concrete structures, although it took the
Romans some time to discover its full potential. Typically it was mixed two-to-one with lime just prior to mixing with water. The Roman port at
Cosa was built of Pozzolana that was poured underwater, apparently using a long tube to carefully lay it up without allowing sea water to mix with it. The three piers are still visible today, with the underwater portions in generally excellent condition after 2100 years.
Pozzolana is a
siliceous and
aluminous material which reacts with
calcium hydroxide in the presence of water to form compounds possessing
cementitious properties at room temperature. This allowed it to be used in the Roman Empire to make cement by combining with lime and water. Pozzolanic ash occurs naturally in volcanic deposits from Pozzuoli and Naples.
Modern pozzolanic cements are a mix of natural or industrial
pozzolans and
Portland cement. In addition to underwater use, the pozzolana's high alkalinity makes it especially resistant to common forms of
corrosion from
sulphates. Once fully hardened, the Portland cement-Pozzolana blend may be stronger than Portland cement due to its lower porosity, which also makes it more resistant to water absorption and
spalling.
Some industrial sources of materials with pozzolanic properties are: Class F (silicious)
fly ash from coal fired power plants, silica fume from silicon production, rice husk ash from rice paddy-fields (agriculture), and
metakaolin from oil sands operations. Metakaolin, a powerful pozzolan, can also be manufactured, and is valued for making white concrete.
Other industrial waste products used in Portland composite cements include Class C (calcareous) fly ash and
ground granulated blast furnace slag.
See also
★
Aerated autoclaved concrete
★
Cenospheres
References
★ McCann, A.M. (1994). "The Roman Port of Cosa",(
273 BC), ''Scientific American, Ancient Cities'', pp. 92–99, by Anna Marguerite McCann. Covers, ''hydraulic concrete, of "Pozzolana mortar"'' and the ''5 piers, of the
Cosa harbor, the Lighthouse on pier 5,'' diagrams, and photographs. Height of Port city:
100 BC.