Building a Better World With Green Cement
With an eye on climate change, a British startup creates a new form of the ancient building material
- By Michael Rosenwald
- Photographs by Alex Masi
- Illustration by John Ritter
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
“I remember feeling very disappointed because when you see that the project you’re working on is not actually what you thought it was going to be, you lose motivation,” he said. “But we felt it was a very worthwhile project, a worthwhile idea, so we tried to find another way to solve the problem.”
At the time Vlasopoulos took up the question, in 2004, big cement firms around the world were looking for new ways to make Portland cement more environmentally palatable. The producers added steel byproducts, such as slag; coal residues, such as fly ash; and other materials, such as magnesium oxide, to bulk up the cement mixture, requiring less Portland cement. They experimented with mineral additives to reduce the temperatures needed to prepare the materials.
But it’s hard to modify a product whose chemistry is not well understood. “We have never actually known the exact chemistry of how this stuff gets hard,” said Hamlin Jennings, an expert on cement chemistry and head of MIT’s Concrete Sustainability Hub, one of several academic initiatives to forge “green” cement. “I don’t think there is any building material used in the world today that is more poorly understood than Portland cement.”
While the cement companies were tinkering with the original, Vlasopoulos took another tack. “You can only do so much to Portland cement to make it better,” he said. “It is what it is. It’s the material you start with. We had to come up with something else.” Vlasopoulos liked the idea of using magnesium oxide as a replacement for the limestone to form the cement, but it needed another material to make it hard. Mixing magnesium oxide alone with water wouldn’t do it—the mixture becomes slushy. And he needed to find a source of magnesium oxide that didn’t release so much carbon dioxide. The class of material he settled on was magnesium silicates, carbon-free compounds derived from talc, serpentine, olivine or other minerals. The world supply of these minerals is about 10,000 billion tons, an important factor because if one runs out of flour, no more cakes can be baked.
Vlasopoulos is not exactly keen to explain how his experimental compound works. His secret sauce is perhaps a very lucrative secret. Several patents have been filed. He will reveal this much: A few years ago, he began mixing magnesium oxide with other chemical compounds he created and water. The mixture hardened into a little ball. He brought it to Cheeseman’s office. “You could feel the heat coming off this little ball,” Cheeseman said. “Something was clearly happening.” Chemical reactions were firing; energy was being released. They did not get overly excited. “I mean, this is cement we are talking about here—it’s not exactly the sexiest stuff in the world,” Cheeseman said. “I wasn’t running up and down the halls doing cartwheels, but it was interesting.”
The chemicals Vlasopoulos mixes with magnesium oxide and water to make the cement harden are magnesium carbonates, which he makes by adding carbon dioxide to other raw materials. That means the cement, in some scenarios, is not just carbon neutral—it’s carbon negative. For every ton of Vlasopoulos’ cement produced, one-tenth of a ton of carbon dioxide could be absorbed.
Eventually Vlasopoulos, with Cheeseman’s help, started a company, Novacem, to develop a new cement. The firm, with more than a dozen employees and partnerships with some of the biggest cement companies in the world, is located in a business incubator for high-tech startup companies at Imperial College. While some other companies in the facility are life sciences startups, with microbiology labs full of gene-sequencing machines and collections of test tubes, Novacem’s lab is a spacious plant that produces loud noises, loads of dust and bucket after bucket of cement. It is the first cement works in central London since the days of the Romans.
Workers wearing hard hats, protective glasses, masks and white lab coats operate a miniaturized version of a cement plant not unlike the one Vlasopoulos worked in during summer breaks.
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Related topics: Industrial Design Global Warming
Additional Sources
“Cement Technology Roadmap 2009,” International Energy Agency, 2009









Comments (5)
Responding to Maury Minette's comment, yes, cement when mixed with water and various aggregates become concrete, but not all concrete requires high or even medium strength. Many types of foundations are just a setting bed, mortars are just a leveling course. Many times concrete mixtures are just a filler for gravity retaining walls, an acoustical barrier or a fire stop. I would like it here. Robert Pare, Architect
Posted by Robert Pare on December 29,2011 | 08:17 PM
Green cement is a misnomer, the author is really talking about “green concrete,” if the product has a compressive strength of 80MPa. Why would an architect want something that is more expensive and is not as strong as readily available high strength concrete, which measures well over 120MPa? These green products never do the job as cheaply, and in most cases not as well as the products they replace. Green Cement will never occupy more than a niche market unless the government provides a subsidy and mandates its use.
Posted by Maury Minette on December 20,2011 | 01:19 PM
For another way to produce cement while limiting CO2, see "Nuclear Cement" at
http://energyfromthorium.com/2011/11/07/nuclear-cement/
Posted by Robert Hargraves on December 4,2011 | 09:39 AM
How soon could I get some of this? I live in PA and I am re-doing my front sidewalk and steps.
Posted by Isaak Berg on November 28,2011 | 04:00 PM
After working with and around concrete for 40yrs I was wondering 3 things; what the wt. is vs. cocrete, cost vs. portland, and more about the ability to color this new mixture. Along with the use of CO2, these anwer could make this stuff very desirable to the customer.
Posted by Robin Wester on November 24,2011 | 05:15 AM