Also known as pozzuolana, pozzolanic ash, pulvis puteolanus
thumb|right|Pozzolana from Mount Vesuvius volcano, Italy Pozzolana or pozzuolana ( , ), also known as pozzolanic ash (), is a natural siliceous or siliceous-aluminous material that reacts with calcium hydroxide in the presence of water at room temperature (cf. pozzolanic reaction). In this reaction insoluble calcium silicate hydrate and calcium aluminate hydrate compounds are formed possessing cementitious properties. The designation pozzolana is derived from one of the primary deposits of volcanic ash used by the Romans in Italy, at Pozzuoli. The modern definition of pozzolana encompasses any
via Wikidata · CC0
thumb|right|Pozzolana from Mount Vesuvius volcano, Italy Pozzolana or pozzuolana ( , ), also known as pozzolanic ash (), is a natural siliceous or siliceous-aluminous material that reacts with calcium hydroxide in the presence of water at room temperature (cf. pozzolanic reaction). In this reaction insoluble calcium silicate hydrate and calcium aluminate hydrate compounds are formed possessing cementitious properties. The designation pozzolana is derived from one of the primary deposits of volcanic ash used by the Romans in Italy, at Pozzuoli. The modern definition of pozzolana encompasses any volcanic material (pumice or volcanic ash), predominantly composed of fine volcanic glass, that is used as a pozzolan. Note the difference with the term pozzolan, which exerts no bearing on the specific origin of the material, as opposed to pozzolana, which can only be used for pozzolans of volcanic origin, primarily composed of volcanic glass.
== Historical use ==
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).