Stones Flashcards
DIFERENT KIND OF STONES
Artificial stones
The qualities required can be
controlled by the selection of
raw materials
- Defined properties
- Definition of the properties
Natural stones
- Natural stones are extracted from stone quarries.
- Varying mechanical and physical properties
- Requires precise selection.
Dry stone walls
building method by which structures are constructed from stones without any mortar to bind them together.
It works by carefully-selected interlocking stones
Ashler
Ashlar is prepared stone work of any type of stone.
Ashlar blocks were used in the construction of normally very old buildings like castles.
Generally the external face is smooth or polished.
Jointed brick
Joint bricks masonry is a structure of individual units laid in and bound together by mortar.
- Masonry is very heat resistant good fire protection.
- Masonry walls are better resistant to hurricanes or tornadoes
Rubble stone.
- Rubble masonry is rough and not laid in regular courses
- The stones can be bonded with mortar
- This stone the scrap left over from processing.
Stone finishes
- Polished finish - a glossy surface
- Hone finish - a satin smooth surface finish
- Thermal finish - intense heat flaming.
- Diamond sawed
- Rough sawn
- Bush-hammered
Fields of application
- Masonry
- Façade lining
- Roof covering
- Road construction
- Concrete production
Methods of manufacture
Bricks may be made from:
- clay, shale,
- soft slate,
- calcium silicate,
- concrete
Three processes :
- soft mud,
- dry press, or
- extruded.
Burned Bricks
basic materials are clay and loam
Production:
- Grinding and mixing of raw materials
- Forming of the bricks
- Drying of the formed bricks
- Burning of the bricks in tunnel kiln at 900°C – 1500°C for 1-3 days
Bricks classification
- Compressive Strength
- Density
- Dimensions
Bricks important qualities
- Compressive strength
- Heat insulating value and heat storage capacity
- Water-absorption and water-permeability
- Vapor permeability
- Resistance against weather, chemicals and fire
Mud bricks
- raw clay + 25-30% sand to reduce shrinkage.
- The clay is first ground and mixed with water
- The clay is then pressed into steel moulds
- The shaped clay is fired (“burned”) at 900-1000 °C to achieve strength.
Dry pressed bricks
- start with a much thicker clay mix, so it forms more accurate, sharper-edged bricks.
- The greater force in pressing and the longer burn make this method more expensive.
Extruded bricks
- clay is mixed with 10-15% water
- drying for between 20 and 40 hours at 50-150 °C
Calcium silicate bricks
raw materials
- lime mixed with quartz,
- crushed flint or crushed siliceous
- mineral colourants.