Question undefined. The answer depends on how much cement you have.
There are 3 types of cement,OPC (Ordinary Portland cement)PPC (Portland pozzolona cement)Special Cements.
I consider cement as a heterogeneous mixture.
Cement contains silica and calcium
Cement is a noun and a verb.
clay + limestone = cement
94 pounds or 42.6377kg
Cement is low density material, that is it occupies more volume (space) for less mass. Hence transporting cement is costly matter. Hence cement cannot be distributed over long distance and is distributed in regionally.
Because he wanted to create a "mass"terpiece
assuming kilos means kilograms. In that case, there is no definite answer. Kilograms are units of mass and ite dpends on the consistency (or density) of the cement mixture. A cubic meter of cement can have various densities.
There is no effect on the specific gravity if some of the sample is removed. The amount of mass will change, but it will still have the same specific gravity. It is basically a density. The specific gravity of 1lb of cement is the same as the specific gravity of 100lbs of cement, you just have more cement.
Please use the formula: mass = volume x density. (This can be derived by manipulating the definition of density: density = mass / volume.)
Although put together by humans, the parts of cement are natural. Cement is a fine, soft, powdery-type substance. It is made from a mixture of natural rocks: limestone, clay, sand and/or shale. When cement is mixed with water, it can bind sand and gravel into a hard, solid mass called concrete.
well mass wasting is like a pool of wood that is keep slanting towards the grass or cement or anything but it is practically falling slowly
Refer to the definition of density: density = mass / volume. Also, each substance has its characteristic density, independent of its size. A pound of cement will have the same density as a ton of cement. And cement is more dense than rice, regardless of how big a chunk of each you take.
cement cement it is easier to run on cement cement
No. Mankind is currently incapable of converting mass to energy in a way efficient enough to turn cement into energy. If one were even going to do so with some advanced technology, one would likely not take the effort to create cement, and would simply convert the raw materials.
When cement is mixed with water, it forms slurry which gradually becomes less plastic with the passage of time & finally a hard mass is obtained. In this process, at a certain stage when the cement paste is sufficiently rigid to withstand a definite amount of Pressure, it is said to have set & the time required to reach this stage is termed as "setting time".