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Low-Carbon Future: Reimagining Cement

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Milind Khangan, Manager – Marketing, Vertex Market Research, discusses how cement, India’s hard-to-abate sector, is paving the path to Net Zero.

The Indian cement industry, the world’s second-largest, holds an installed capacity of around 700 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) and is fundamental to India’s infrastructure growth and urbanisation. However, it remains one of the country’s most challenging ‘hard-to-abate’ sectors, contributing nearly 7–8 per cent of national industrial CO2 emissions.
With India’s commitment to achieving Net-Zero by 2070, decarbonising cement production has become a national strategic priority. The sector’s transformation can be understood through the 3Cs of Decarbonisation — Cut emissions, Cement innovation, and Carbon capture and utilisation. Together, these pillars, underpinned by digital optimisation, automation and enabling policy frameworks, represent a structured pathway towards deep emission reduction while maintaining industrial competitiveness. Government-backed pilot projects and public-private testbeds are helping transition the sector from demonstration to early commercial adoption, creating a foundation for large-scale transformation.

Cut: Cutting operational emissions (near-term, high ROI)
The first pillar ‘Cut’ focuses on immediate, high-impact interventions targeting emissions from fuel combustion and electricity use, which collectively account for around 30 per cent of the industry’s total emissions.

Fuel switching and AFR
Co-processing Refuse-Derived Fuel (RDF), industrial waste, and biomass is steadily replacing coal and other high-carbon fossil fuels. This approach not only lowers Scope 1 emissions but also contributes to waste management in urban and industrial clusters.

  • Ambuja Cements increased its AFR consumption in kilns to 9.4 per cent in H1 FY25 from 7 per cent in H1 FY24, indicating an improved Thermal Substitution Rate (TSR).
  • Securing consistent, reliable and high-quality RDF feedstock through municipal partnerships has become a strategic priority.

Waste Heat Recovery (WHR)
WHR systems convert residual heat from the pyroprocess into captive electricity, reducing Scope 2 emissions and enhancing thermal efficiency. Increasingly, WHR is being integrated with renewable energy (RE) sources to stabilise green power supply.

  • As of March 2025, UltraTech Cement held 342 MW of WHR capacity, contributing to a total green energy portfolio of 1.36 GW, including solar and wind.
  • Dalmia Bharat increased its renewable energy share to 39 per cent in Q2 FY25, targeting 45 per cent by the end of the fiscal year.
  • In August 2025, UltraTech commissioned a 7.5 MW Hybrid Round-the-Clock (RTC) project (solar + wind + battery) in Gujarat in August 2025 to stabilise renewable energy supply.

Energy efficiency and process optimisation
Advanced digitised process controls, AI-driven kiln optimisation, and predictive maintenance
systems reduce clinker overburn, stabilise AFR use, and optimise thermal efficiency. Closed-loop kiln control using AI/ML is increasingly identified as a strategic differentiator.

  • AI and machine learning-based closed-loop kiln control delivers thermal energy savings of 5-10 per cent and reduces downtime.
  • Imubit reported clinker production efficiency improvements of 5-10 per cent and fuel consumption reductions of 3-5 per cent by deployment of Closed-Loop AI Optimisation (AIO).

Renewable power procurement
Vertex Market Research expects the expansion of on-site solar, wind, and open-access corporate PPAs is reducing reliance on grid electricity and mitigating Scope 2 emissions. The trend is shifting towards hybrid and RTC renewable solutions integrating solar, wind, and battery systems.

  • UltraTech added 269 MW of renewable capacity in Q4 FY25, meeting approximately 46 per cent of its power requirements. The total capacity consists of 1,021 MW of solar, wind, and hybrid energy sources and 342 MW of WHRS.
  • In its FY25 annual report, Dalmia Bharat announced that its total operational renewable energy (RE) capacity target is set to increase from 267 MW to 595 MW by the end of fiscal year 2026.

Green hydrogen integration
Supported by the National Green Hydrogen Mission, pilot projects are underway to explore green hydrogen as a substitute fuel in kilns and grinding units. While widespread commercial deployment is anticipated post-2030, early trials in calciners and low-temperature operations are creating a technological base for future zero-carbon heat applications.

Decarbonisation targets and commitments
Indian majors are aligning their climate goals with the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi).

  • Ambuja and ACC are committed to Net Zero by 2050 and are the only 2 cement companies in India undergoing Net Zero target validation from the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi).
  • UltraTech and Ambuja Cement aim for a 27 per cent reduction in Scope 1 CO2 emissions by 2032 and have already achieved a 12 per cent reduction.

Cement: Product and process innovations (medium-term structural change)
The second pillar ‘Cement’ centres on re-engineering materials, clinker ratios, and manufacturing processes to achieve structural emission reduction. It aims to reduce clinker intensity and embodied carbon, thereby addressing the intrinsic process emissions (around 60 per cent of total CO2 output).

Clinker substitution and SCMs
While fly ash and slag remain key SCMs, their long-term availability could decline as the power and steel sectors decarbonise. Consequently, the industry is diversifying into calcined clays, silica fume, and limestone fillers to sustain clinker replacement rates. Multi-component (ternary and quaternary) blends are being tested to maximise emission reduction potential.

Limestone calcined clay cement (LC3)
LC3 technology enables up to 50 per cent clinker replacement using locally available clays and limestone, achieving 30–40 per cent lower CO2 emissions without significant cost escalation.

  • In July 2025, JK Cement and JK Lakshmi launched India’s first commercial LC3 under BIS IS 18189:2023.
  • Early implementation of LC3 in infrastructure projects such as the Noida International Airport signals growing market acceptance.

Novel kiln concepts
The calcination process is a major source of process emissions. To address calcination-related emissions, innovations such as electrified calciners and Electric Arc Calciners (EAC) are being piloted.

  • The collaboration between Dalmia Cement and SaltX Technology is focused on advancing the Electric Arc Calciner (EAC) pilot project in India. These pilots are heavily dependent on low-cost renewable electricity. Although at a pre-commercial stage, such technologies are vital for achieving deep decarbonisation beyond 2035.

Blended products portfolio and cement use efficiency (CUE)
The GCCA India–TERI Decarbonisation Roadmap (March 2025) projects that optimised mix designs and multi-blend cements could reduce India’s cement demand from 1,440 MT to 944 MT by 2047, a 34 per cent reduction. Efficient structural design, increased Ready-Mix Concrete (RMC) use, and multi-component blends will be critical enablers.
Recarbonation and circular concrete
Concrete naturally reabsorbs CO2 during its lifecycle, a process termed recarbonation. GCCA India estimates that recarbonation could offset up to 5.9 per cent of cumulative cement sector emissions by 2070. Recycling concrete aggregates can accelerate this process, closing material loops and promoting circularity.

Carbon: CCUS and carbon management (long-term, residual emissions)
The ‘Carbon’ pillar addresses intrinsic process emissions from clinker calcination, which cannot be fully eliminated through fuel switching, process optimisation or clinker substitution.

Carbon capture and utilisation (CCU) and testbeds
India’s approach prioritises CCU over storage (CCS) to convert captured CO2 into value-added products to offset high CAPEX, improving project economics.
India prioritises CCU over storage, converting captured CO2 into value-added products to offset high CAPEX. DST-supported public-private pilot projects validate indigenous technologies such as oxygen-enhanced calcination and solvent-based capture. Pilot-scale operations (1–2 tpd) target products including lightweight concrete blocks, precipitated calcium carbonate, and formic acid.

  • In May 2025, the Department of Science and Technology (DST) launched five CCU testbeds for the cement sector under a public–private partnership (PPP) framework.
  • These pilots (1–2 TPD scale) are testing oxygen-enhanced calcination and solvent-based capture technologies, with utilisation routes for precipitated calcium carbonate, lightweight blocks, and formic acid.

Policy and financial levers
The Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS), established under the Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act 2022, mandates GHG intensity reduction for large cement plants. This creates
financial incentives for low-carbon investments and CCUS adoption.

  • The Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS), established under the Energy Conservation (Amendment) Act, 2022, is now being implemented. The Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) released notifications in mid-2025, setting GHG Emission Intensity (GEI) targets for large entities. Cement is a compliance sector with targets for 2 per cent reduction in GEI for FY 2025-26, increasing in subsequent years.
  • Cement plants are mandated to meet GHG Emission Intensity reduction targets, creating a financial incentive for CCUS adoption and low-carbon cement production. The establishment of a domestic carbon market provides the critical price signal for high-CAPEX solutions such as CCUS. This creates a direct financial mandate for CCUS and low-carbon investment.

Hub-and-cluster infrastructure
Developing shared CCU infrastructure across cement clusters or hubs can lower capital intensity per plant. High-density cement regions such as Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Gujarat and Rajasthan are under evaluation for hub-and-cluster carbon management models, in alignment with GCCA India’s recommendations.

Conclusion
Indian cement industry is entering a decisive decade of transformation. Through the 3Cs approach, the sector is not merely mirroring global practices but crafting a contextually tailored, India-specific roadmap to Net-Zero.
Near-term measures under Cut can be rapidly scaled, Cement innovations will drive material efficiency and cost competitiveness, and high-tech Carbon management will mitigate unavoidable and residual emissions. Success hinges on sustained policy continuity, financial incentives, functional carbon credit trading scheme, and close coordination among industry leaders, government agencies, and R&D institutions. The collective goal is to translate pilot projects into scalable business models that preserve competitiveness while achieving verifiable emission reductions and positioning India as a global benchmark in low-carbon cement manufacturing.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Milind Khandan, Manager – Marketing, Vertex Market Research, comes with over five years of experience in market research, lead generation and team management.

Concrete

Refractory demands in our kiln have changed

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Radha Singh, Senior Manager (P&Q), Shree Digvijay Cement, points out why performance, predictability and life-cycle value now matter more than routine replacement in cement kilns.

As Indian cement plants push for higher throughput, increased alternative fuel usage and tighter shutdown cycles, refractory performance in kilns and pyro-processing systems is under growing pressure. In this interview, Radha Singh, Senior Manager (P&Q), Shree Digvijay Cement, shares how refractory demands have evolved on the ground and how smarter digital monitoring is improving kiln stability, uptime and clinker quality.

How have refractory demands changed in your kiln and pyro-processing line over the last five years?
Over the last five years, refractory demands in our kiln and pyro line have changed. Earlier, the focus was mostly on standard grades and routine shutdown-based replacement. But now, because of higher production loads, more alternative fuels and raw materials (AFR) usage and greater temperature variation, the expectation from refractory has increased.
In our own case, the current kiln refractory has already completed around 1.5 years, which itself shows how much more we now rely on materials that can handle thermal shock, alkali attack and coating fluctuations. We have moved towards more stable, high-performance linings so that we don’t have to enter the kiln frequently for repairs.
Overall, the shift has been from just ‘installation and run’ to selecting refractories that give longer life, better coating behaviour and more predictable performance under tougher operating conditions.

What are the biggest refractory challenges in the preheater, calciner and cooler zones?
• Preheater: Coating instability, chloride/sulphur cycles and brick erosion.
• Calciner: AFR firing, thermal shock and alkali infiltration.
• Cooler: Severe abrasion, red-river formation and mechanical stress on linings.
Overall, the biggest challenge is maintaining lining stability under highly variable operating conditions.

How do you evaluate and select refractory partners for long-term performance?
In real plant conditions, we don’t select a refractory partner just by looking at price. First, we see their past performance in similar kilns and whether their material has actually survived our operating conditions. We also check how strong their technical support is during shutdowns, because installation quality matters as much as the material itself.
Another key point is how quickly they respond during breakdowns or hot spots. A good partner should be available on short notice. We also look at their failure analysis capability, whether they can explain why a lining failed and suggest improvements.
On top of this, we review the life they delivered in the last few campaigns, their supply reliability and their willingness to offer plant-specific custom solutions instead of generic grades. Only a partner who supports us throughout the life cycle, which includes selection, installation, monitoring and post-failure analysis, fits our long-term requirement.

Can you share a recent example where better refractory selection improved uptime or clinker quality?
Recently, we upgraded to a high-abrasion basic brick at the kiln outlet. Earlier we had frequent chipping and coating loss. With the new lining, thermal stability improved and the coating became much more stable. As a result, our shutdown interval increased and clinker quality remained more consistent. It had a direct impact on our uptime.

How is increased AFR use affecting refractory behaviour?
Increased AFR use is definitely putting more stress on the refractory. The biggest issue we see daily is the rise in chlorine, alkalis and volatiles, which directly attack the lining, especially in the calciner and kiln inlet. AFR firing is also not as stable as conventional fuel, so we face frequent temperature fluctuations, which cause more thermal shock and small cracks in the lining.
Another real problem is coating instability. Some days the coating builds too fast, other days it suddenly drops, and both conditions impact refractory life. We also notice more dust circulation and buildup inside the calciner whenever the AFR mix changes, which again increases erosion.
Because of these practical issues, we have started relying more on alkali-resistant, low-porosity and better thermal shock–resistant materials to handle the additional stress coming from AFR.

What role does digital monitoring or thermal profiling play in your refractory strategy?
Digital tools like kiln shell scanners, IR imaging and thermal profiling help us detect weakening areas much earlier. This reduces unplanned shutdowns, helps identify hotspots accurately and allows us to replace only the critical sections. Overall, our maintenance has shifted from reactive to predictive, improving lining life significantly.

How do you balance cost, durability and installation speed during refractory shutdowns?
We focus on three points:
• Material quality that suits our thermal profile and chemistry.
• Installation speed, in fast turnarounds, we prefer monolithic.
• Life-cycle cost—the cheapest material is not the most economical. We look at durability, future downtime and total cost of ownership.
This balance ensures reliable performance without unnecessary expenditure.

What refractory or pyro-processing innovations could transform Indian cement operations?
Some promising developments include:
• High-performance, low-porosity and nano-bonded refractories
• Precast modular linings to drastically reduce shutdown time
• AI-driven kiln thermal analytics
• Advanced coating management solutions
• More AFR-compatible refractory mixes

These innovations can significantly improve kiln stability, efficiency and maintenance planning across the industry.

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Concrete

Digital supply chain visibility is critical

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MSR Kali Prasad, Chief Digital and Information Officer, Shree Cement, discusses how data, discipline and scale are turning Industry 4.0 into everyday business reality.

Over the past five years, digitalisation in Indian cement manufacturing has moved decisively beyond experimentation. Today, it is a strategic lever for cost control, operational resilience and sustainability. In this interview, MSR Kali Prasad, Chief Digital and Information Officer, Shree Cement, explains how integrated digital foundations, advanced analytics and real-time visibility are helping deliver measurable business outcomes.

How has digitalisation moved from pilot projects to core strategy in Indian cement manufacturing over the past five years?
Digitalisation in Indian cement has evolved from isolated pilot initiatives into a core business strategy because outcomes are now measurable, repeatable and scalable. The key shift has been the move away from standalone solutions toward an integrated digital foundation built on standardised processes, governed data and enterprise platforms that can be deployed consistently across plants and functions.
At Shree Cement, this transition has been very pragmatic. The early phase focused on visibility through dashboards, reporting, and digitisation of critical workflows. Over time, this has progressed into enterprise-level analytics and decision support across manufacturing and the supply chain,
with clear outcomes in cost optimisation, margin protection and revenue improvement through enhanced customer experience.
Equally important, digital is no longer the responsibility of a single function. It is embedded into day-to-day operations across planning, production, maintenance, despatch and customer servicing, supported by enterprise systems, Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT) data platforms, and a structured approach to change management.

Which digital interventions are delivering the highest ROI across mining, production and logistics today?
In a capital- and cost-intensive sector like cement, the highest returns come from digital interventions that directly reduce unit costs or unlock latent capacity without significant capex.
Supply chain and planning (advanced analytics): Tools for demand forecasting, S&OP, network optimisation and scheduling deliver strong returns by lowering logistics costs, improving service levels, and aligning production with demand in a fragmented and regionally diverse market.
Mining (fleet and productivity analytics): Data-led mine planning, fleet analytics, despatch discipline, and idle-time reduction improve fuel efficiency and equipment utilisation, generating meaningful savings in a cost-heavy operation.
Manufacturing (APC and process analytics): Advanced Process Control, mill optimisation, and variability reduction improve thermal and electrical efficiency, stabilise quality and reduce rework and unplanned stoppages.
Customer experience and revenue enablement (digital platforms): Dealer and retailer apps, order visibility and digitally enabled technical services improve ease of doing business and responsiveness. We are also empowering channel partners with transparent, real-time information on schemes, including eligibility, utilisation status and actionable recommendations, which improves channel satisfaction and market execution while supporting revenue growth.
Overall, while Artificial Intelligence (AI) and IIoT are powerful enablers, it is advanced analytics anchored in strong processes that typically delivers the fastest and most reliable ROI.

How is real-time data helping plants shift from reactive maintenance to predictive and prescriptive operations?
Real-time and near real-time data is driving a more proactive and disciplined maintenance culture, beginning with visibility and progressively moving toward prediction and prescription.
At Shree Cement, we have implemented a robust SAP Plant Maintenance framework to standardise maintenance workflows. This is complemented by IIoT-driven condition monitoring, ensuring consistent capture of equipment health indicators such as vibration, temperature, load, operating patterns and alarms.
Real-time visibility enables early detection of abnormal conditions, allowing teams to intervene before failures occur. As data quality improves and failure histories become structured, predictive models can anticipate likely failure modes and recommend timely interventions, improving MTBF and reducing downtime. Over time, these insights will evolve into prescriptive actions, including spares readiness, maintenance scheduling, and operating parameter adjustments, enabling reliability optimisation with minimal disruption.
A critical success factor is adoption. Predictive insights deliver value only when they are embedded into daily workflows, roles and accountability structures. Without this, they remain insights without action.

In a cost-sensitive market like India, how do cement companies balance digital investment with price competitiveness?
In India’s intensely competitive cement market, digital investments must be tightly linked to tangible business outcomes, particularly cost reduction, service improvement, and faster decision-making.
This balance is achieved by prioritising high-impact use cases such as planning efficiency, logistics optimisation, asset reliability, and process stability, all of which typically deliver quick payback. Equally important is building scalable and governed digital foundations that reduce the marginal cost of rolling out new use cases across plants.
Digitally enabled order management, live despatch visibility, and channel partner platforms also improve customer centricity while controlling cost-to-serve, allowing service levels to improve without proportionate increases in headcount or overheads.
In essence, the most effective digital investments do not add cost. They protect margins by reducing variability, improving planning accuracy, and strengthening execution discipline.

How is digitalisation enabling measurable reductions in energy consumption, emissions, and overall carbon footprint?
Digitalisation plays a pivotal role in improving energy efficiency, reducing emissions and lowering overall carbon intensity.
Real-time monitoring and analytics enable near real-time tracking of energy consumption and critical operating parameters, allowing inefficiencies to be identified quickly and corrective actions to be implemented. Centralised data consolidation across plants enables benchmarking, accelerates best-practice adoption, and drives consistent improvements in energy performance.
Improved asset reliability through predictive maintenance reduces unplanned downtime and process instability, directly lowering energy losses. Digital platforms also support more effective planning and control of renewable energy sources and waste heat recovery systems, reducing dependence on fossil fuels.
Most importantly, digitalisation enables sustainability progress to be tracked with greater accuracy and consistency, supporting long-term ESG commitments.

What role does digital supply chain visibility play in managing demand volatility and regional market dynamics in India?
Digital supply chain visibility is critical in India, where demand is highly regional, seasonality is pronounced, and logistics constraints can shift rapidly.
At Shree Cement, planning operates across multiple horizons. Annual planning focuses on capacity, network footprint and medium-term demand. Monthly S&OP aligns demand, production and logistics, while daily scheduling drives execution-level decisions on despatch, sourcing and prioritisation.
As digital maturity increases, this structure is being augmented by central command-and-control capabilities that manage exceptions such as plant constraints, demand spikes, route disruptions and order prioritisation. Planning is also shifting from aggregated averages to granular, cost-to-serve and exception-based decision-making, improving responsiveness, lowering logistics costs and strengthening service reliability.

How prepared is the current workforce for Industry 4.0, and what reskilling strategies are proving most effective?
Workforce preparedness for Industry 4.0 is improving, though the primary challenge lies in scaling capabilities consistently across diverse roles.
The most effective approach is to define capability requirements by role and tailor enablement accordingly. Senior leadership focuses on digital literacy for governance, investment prioritisation, and value tracking. Middle management is enabled to use analytics for execution discipline and adoption. Frontline sales and service teams benefit from
mobile-first tools and KPI-driven workflows, while shop-floor and plant teams focus on data-driven operations, APC usage, maintenance discipline, safety and quality routines.
Personalised, role-based learning paths, supported by on-ground champions and a clear articulation of practical benefits, drive adoption far more effectively than generic training programmes.

Which emerging digital technologies will fundamentally reshape cement manufacturing in the next decade?
AI and GenAI are expected to have the most significant impact, particularly when combined with connected operations and disciplined processes.
Key technologies likely to reshape the sector include GenAI and agentic AI for faster root-cause analysis, knowledge access, and standardisation of best practices; industrial foundation models that learn patterns across large sensor datasets; digital twins that allow simulation of process changes before implementation; and increasingly autonomous control systems that integrate sensors, AI, and APC to maintain stability with minimal manual intervention.
Over time, this will enable more centralised monitoring and management of plant operations, supported by strong processes, training and capability-building.

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Concrete

Cement Additives for Improved Grinding Efficiency

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Shreesh A Khadilkar discusses how advanced additive formulations allow customised, high-performance and niche cements—offering benefits while supporting blended cements and long-term cost and carbon reduction.

Cement additives are chemicals (inorganic and organic) added in small amounts (0.01 per cent to 0.2 per cent by weight) during cement grinding. Their main job? Reduce agglomeration, prevent pack-set, and keep the mill running smoother. Thus, these additions primarily improve, mill thru-puts, achieve lower clinker factor in blended cements PPC/PSC/PCC. Additionally, these additives improve concrete performance of cements or even for specific special premium cements with special USPs like lower setting times or for reduced water permeability in the resultant cement mortars and concrete (water repellent /permeation resistant cements), corrosion resistance etc.
The cement additives are materials which could be further differentiated as:

Grinding aids:
• Bottlenecks in cement grinding capacity, such materials can enhance throughputs
• Low specific electrical energy consumption during cement grinding
• Reduce “Pack set” problem and improve powder flowability

Quality improvers:
• Opportunity for further clinker factor reduction
• Solution for delayed cement setting or strength development issues at early or later ages.

Others: materials which are used for specific special cements with niche properties as discussed in the subsequent pages.
When cement additives are used as grinding aids or quality improvers, in general the additives reduce the inter-particle forces; reduce coating over grinding media and mill internals. Due to creation of like charges on cement particles, there is decreased agglomeration, much improved flowability, higher generation of fines better dispersion of particles in separator feed and reduction of mill filling level (decrease of residence time). However, in VRM grinding; actions need to be taken to have stable bed formation on the table.
It has been reported in literature and also substantiated by a number of detailed evaluations of different cement additive formulations in market, that the cement additive formulations are a combination of different chemical compounds, typically composed of:

  1. Accelerator/s for the hydration reaction of cements which are dependent on the acceleration effect desired in mortar compressive strengths at early or later ages, the choice of the materials is also dependent on clinker quality and blending components (flyash / slag) or a mix of both.
  2. Water reducer / workability / wet-ability enhancer, which would show impact on the resultant cement mortars and concrete. Some of the compounds (retarders) like polysaccharide derivatives, gluconates etc., show an initial retarding action towards hydration which result in reducing the water requirements for the cements thus act as water reducers, or it could be some appropriate polymeric molecules which show improved wet-ability and reduce water demand. These are selected based on the mineral component and type of cements (PPC/PSC /PCC).
  3. Grinding aids: Compounds that work as Grinding Aid i.e. which would enhance Mill thru-put on one hand as well as would increase the early strengths due to the higher fines generation/ or activation of cement components. These compounds could be like alkanol-amines such as TIPA, DEIPA, TEA etc. or could be compounds like glycols and other poly-ols, depending on whether it is OPC or PPC or PSC or PCC manufacture.

Mechanism of action — Step By Step—

  1. Reduce Agglomeration, Cement particles get electrostatically charged during grinding, stick together, form “flocs”, block mill efficiency, waste energy. Grinding aid molecules adsorb onto particle surfaces, neutralise charge, prevent re-agglomeration.
  2. Improve Powder Flowability, Adsorbed molecules create a lubricating layer, particles slide past each other easier, better mill throughput, less “dead zone” buildup.
    Also reduces caking on mill liners, diaphragms, and separator screens, less downtime for cleaning.
  3. Enhance Grinding Efficiency (Finer Product Faster), By preventing agglomeration, particles stay dispersed more surface area exposed to grinding media, finer grind achieved with same energy input, Or: same fineness achieved with less energy, huge savings.
    Example:
    • Without aid ? 3500 cm²/g Blaine needs 40 kWh/ton
    • With use of optimum grinding aid same fineness at 32 kWh/ton 20 per cent energy savings
  4. Reduce Pack Set and Silo Caking Grinding aids (GA) inhibit hydration of free lime (CaO) during storage prevents premature hardening or “pack set” in silos. especially critical in humid climates or with high free lime clinker.
    It may be stated here that Overdosing of GA can cause: – Foaming in mill (especially with glycols) reduces grinding efficiency, retardation of cement setting (especially with amines/acids), odor issues (in indoor mills) – Corrosion of mill components (if acidic aids used improperly)
    The best practice to optimise use of GA is Start with 0.02 per cent to 0.05 per cent dosage test fineness, flow, and set time adjust up/down. Due to static charge of particles, the sample may stick to the sides of sampler pipe and so sampling need to be properly done.
    Depending on type of cements i.e. OPC, PPC, PSC, PCC, the grinding aids combinations need to be optimised, a typical Poly carboxylate ether also could be a part of the combo grinding aids

Cement additives for niche properties of the cement in concrete.
The cement additives can also be tailor made to create specific niche properties in cements, OPC, PPC, PSC and PCC to create premium or special brands. The special niche properties of the cement being its additional USP of such cement products, and are useful for customers to build a durable concrete structure with increased service life.


Such properties could be:
• Additives for improved concrete performance of cements, high early strength in PPC/PSC/PCC, much reduced water demand in cement, cements with improved slump retentivity in concrete, self-compacting, self levelling in concrete, cements with improved adhesion property of the cement mortar
• Water repellence / water proofing, permeability resistance in mortars and concrete.
• Biocidal cement
• Photo catalytic cements
• Cements with negligible ASR reactions etc.

Additives for cements for improved concrete performance
High early strengths: Use of accelerators. These are chemical compounds which enhance the degree of hydration of cement. These can include setting or hardening accelerators depending on whether their action occurs in the plastic or hardened state respectively. Thus, the setting accelerators reduce the setting time, whereas the hardening accelerators increase the early age strengths. The setting accelerators act during the initial minutes of the cement hydration, whereas the hardening accelerators act mainly during the initial days of hydration.
Chloride salts are the best in class. However, use of chloride salts as hardening accelerators are strongly discouraged for their action in promoting the corrosion of rebar, thus, chloride-free accelerators are preferred. The hardening accelerators could be combinations of compounds like nitrate, nitrite and thiocyanate salts of alkali or alkaline earth metals or thiosulphate, formate, and alkanol amines depending on the cement types.
However, especially in blended cements (PPC/PSC/PCC the increased early strengths invariably decrease the 28 day strengths. These aspects lead to creating combo additives along with organic polymers to achieve improved early strengths as well as either same or marginally improved 28 days strengths with reduced clinker factor in the blended cement, special OPC with reduced admixture requirements. With use of appropriate combination of inorganic and organic additives we could create an OPC with substantially reduced water demand or improved slump retentivity. Use of such an OPC would show exceptional concrete performance in high grade concretes as it would exhibit lower admixture requirements in High Grade Concretes.
PPC with OPC like properties: With the above concept we could have a PPC, having higher percentage flyash, with a combo cement additive which would have with concrete performance similar to OPC in say M40/M50 concrete. Such a PPC would produce a high-strength PPC concrete (= 60 MPa @ 28d) + improved workability, durability and sustainability.
Another interesting aspect could also be of using ultrafine fine flyash /ultrafine slags as additions in OPC/PPC/PSC for achieving lower clinker factor as well as to achieve improved later age strengths with or without a combo cement additive.
The initial adhesion property at sites of especially PPC/PSC/PCC based mortars can be improved through use of appropriate organic polymers addition during the manufacture of these cements. Such cements would have a better adhesion property for plastering/brick bonding etc., as it has much lower rebound loss of their mortars in such applications.
It is needless to mention here that with use of additives, we could also have cement with viscosity modifying cement additives, for self-compaction and self-leveling concrete performance.
Use of Phosphogypsum retards the setting time of cements, we can use additive different additive combos to overcome retardation and improve the 1 day strengths of the cements and concretes.

About the author:
Shreesh Khadilkar, Consultant & Advisor, Former Director Quality & Product Development, ACC, a seasoned consultant and advisor, brings over 37 years of experience in cement manufacturing, having held leadership roles in R&D and product development at ACC Ltd. With deep expertise in innovative cement concepts, he is dedicated to sharing his knowledge and improving the performance of cement plants globally.

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