bricks formation

19
Manufacturing Bricks

Transcript of bricks formation

Page 1: bricks formation

Manufacturing Bricks

Page 2: bricks formation

Bricks

• A brick is a block, or a single unit of a ceramic material used in masonry construction.

• Bricks are typically produced in common or standard sizes in bulk quantities.

• It is one of the longest lasting and strongest building materials used throughout history.

Page 3: bricks formation

HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN MASONRY

• It is the simplest of all the building techniques.

Sun-dried bricks - With the availability of fire became burnt bricks

Invention of kilns made mass production of bricks easy

Limestone turned into lime mortar replaced mud as mortar

Page 4: bricks formation

Masonry History

Rich History Through the mid-1800s

– Primary Building Materials Late 1800s

– New Products Developed– Ended Masonry’s Dominance

Page 5: bricks formation

5

Brick Masonry - Uniqueness

Fire Resistance

Size

Durability

Page 6: bricks formation

6

Page 7: bricks formation

MANUFACTURE OF BRICKS FROM CLAY

• Constituents: Brick clays are produced by blending together various clays (surface clays, shales, and fire clays) to produce the desired chemical composition and physical properties.

Page 8: bricks formation

STEPS FOR BRICK FORMATION

• Clay Preparation• Molding• Drying• Firing

Page 9: bricks formation

Clay Preparation

• Clay preparation methods may have to accommodate the physical characteristics of the raw material.

• Special provision may have to be made to deal with certain impurities.

• Preparation consists of transforming the clay rock into plastic moldable material.

Page 10: bricks formation

Molding

• Molding utilizes a drier clay mix, formed into a wedge and thrown into a mold.

• A bow cutter will be used to smooth the top of the brick, and the form will can be released because of a hinged bottom.

Page 11: bricks formation

Drying

• Water was added during clay preparation to increase workability of the mixture, but in drying it is removed for several reasons.

• First, there will be less cracking in fired bricks with less water content.

• Second, additional fuel is needed, beyond what is used for firing, to dry the bricks in the kiln.

• Proper drying of bricks will involved rotating the bricks for different exposures to ensure even drying rates.

Page 12: bricks formation

Firing

• Bricks are burnt either in a periodic kiln or a continuous tunnel kiln.

• Stages of burning: Water-smoking and dehydration (drives off the remaining water from clay at 40o to 150o C).

• Temperature of furnace rises to 1000o to 1300o C - Clay transformed to a ceramic material -

Page 13: bricks formation

13

Brick Masonry - Sizes and Shapes

No standard size Normal coursing - 3 bricks = 8” Larger sizes Custom Shapes & Colors

Page 14: bricks formation

No single standard size available - Size varies Modular Brick: 3 1/2” x 7 1/2” x 2 1/4” (Actual size) Standard Brick : 3 1/2” x 8” x 2 1/4” Engineer Modular : 3 1/2” x 7 1/2” x 2 3/4” Engineer Standard : 3 1/2” x 8” x 2 3/4” Close Modular : 3 1/2” x 7 1/2” x 3 1/4” Roman : 3 1/2” x 11 1/2” x 1 5/8” Norman : 3 1/2” x 11 1/2” x 1 5/8” Brick may be solid, cored, hollow or frogged - This allows even drying of bricks Custom-shaped bricks are often required for building for providing special

details

SIZES, GRADES AND TYPES OF BRICKS

Page 15: bricks formation

15

Page 16: bricks formation

16

Brick Bonds Structural Bonds Cavity (Veneer) Walls

– Running bond– Stacked bond

Page 17: bricks formation
Page 18: bricks formation

18

Page 19: bricks formation

19