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Glossary of Computer Terms
Glossary of
Solar Power Terms
Glossary of
Construction Terms
Glossary of Tile Terms
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|
TERM |
DEFINITION |
|
Abrasion resistance |
Ability of a surface to resist
being worn away by rubbing and friction |
| Absorption |
The relationship of the weight
of the water absorbed be a ceramic specimen subjected to prescribed
immersion procedure, to the weight of the dry specimen, expressed in
percent. |
| Accelerator |
A substance which, when added
to concrete, mortar, or grout, increases the rate of hydration of the
hydraulic cement, shortens the time of setting, or increases the rate of
hardening of strength development, or both. |
| Acrylic |
A general class of resinous
polymers derived from esters, amides or other acrylic acid derivatives. |
| Additive |
A term frequently (but
improperly) used as a synonym for addition or admixture. |
| Adhesion |
The state in which two
surfaces are held together by interfacial forces which may consist of
valence forces or interlocking action, or both. |
| Adhesion, mechanical |
Adhesion between surfaces in
which the adhesive holds the parts together by interlocking action. |
| Adhesion, specific |
Adhesion between surfaces
which are held together by valence forces of the same type as those which
give rise to cohesion. |
| Admixture |
A material other than water,
aggregates, and hydraulic cement, used as an ingredient of concrete or
mortar, and added to the concrete immediately before or during its mixing. |
| Aggregate |
Granular material, such as
sand, gravel, crushed stone, and iron blast-furnace slag, used with a
cementing medium to form a hydraulic-cement, concrete or mortar. |
| Alkali |
A chemical substance which
effectively neutralizes acid material so as to form neutral salts. A base.
The opposite of acid. Examples are ammonia and caustic soda. |
| Backing |
Any material used as a base
over which a finished material is to be installed. |
| Bisque cracks |
Any fractures in the body of a
tile visible both on the face and back. |
| Bond |
The adherence of one material
to another. Effective bonds must be achieved between the mortar and scratch
coat, between the tile and mortar, and between the adhesive and backing. |
| Bonding agent |
A substance applied to a
suitable substrate to create a bond between it and a succeeding layer as
between a subsurface and a terrazzo topping or a succeeding plaster
application. |
| Bond strength |
The force per unit area or
length necessary to rupture a bond. |
| Bright gloss |
Colorless or colored ceramic
glaze have a high gloss. |
| Broken joint |
Ceramic tile installation
featuring each row offset for half its length. |
| Bullnose |
A trim tile with a convex
radius on one edge. This tile is used for finishing the top of a wainscot
or for turning an outside corner. |
| Bullnose corner |
A type of bullnose trim with a
convex radius on two adjacent edges. |
| Butt joint |
A plain square joint between
two members |
| Buttonback tile |
Tile that have projections on
the bondable side. Many of these projections are round and therefore the
term buttonback. |
| Butyl rubber |
A copolymer of about 98%
isobutylene and 2% isoprene. It has the poorest resistance to petroleum
oils and gasolines of any rubber. Excellent resistance to vegetable and
mineral oils: to solvents such as acetone, alcohol, phenol and ethylene
glycol; and to water and gas absorption. Heat resistance is above average.
Sunlight resistance is excellent. It's abrasion resistance is not as good
as natural rubber. Usually low permeability to gases. |
| Catalyst |
Substance which markedly
speeds up the cure of an adhesive when added in minor quantity as compared
to the amounts of primary reactants. |
| Caulking Compound |
A soft, plastic material
consisting of pigment and vehicle, used for sealing joints in buildings and
other structures where normal structural movement may occur. Caulking
compound retains its plasticity for an extended period after application.
It is available in forms suitable for application by gun and knife and in
extruded preformed shapes |
| Ceiling mortar |
Extra-rich wall mortar. |
| Cement |
Usually refers to portland
cement which when mixed with sand, gravel, and water forms concrete.
Generally, cement is an adhesive; specifically, it is that type of adhesive
which sets by virtue of a chemical reaction. |
| Ceramic tile |
A ceramic surfacing unit,
usually relatively thin in relation to facial area, made from clay or a
mixture or clay; and other ceramic material, called the body of the tile,
having either a "glazed" or "unglazed" face, and fired about red heat in the
course of manufacture to a temperature sufficiently high to produce specific
physical properties and characteristics. |
| Colored grout |
Commercially prepared grout
consisting of carefully graded aggregate, portland cement, water dispersing
agents, plasticizers and color fast pigments. |
| Composition tile |
A hard tile surfacing unit
made from a mixture of chemicals. The finished surface can be the mixture
of chemicals or can be marble chips to create a terrazzo finish. The unit
is made hard by the set of the chemicals and the product is not fired as in
the manufacture of ceramic tile. |
| Concrete |
A composite material which
consists essentially of a binding medium within which are embedded particles
or fragments of aggregate; in portland cement concrete, the binder is a
mixture of portland cement and water. |
| Covebase |
A trim tile having a concave
radius on one edge and a convex radius with a flat landing on the opposite
edge. This base often is used as the only course of tile above the floor
tile. |
| Crazing |
The cracking which occurs in
fired glazes or other ceramic coatings due to critical tensile stresses. |
| Cure time |
The time required to produce
vulcanization of hydration at a given temperature. The cure time varies
widely, being dependent on the type of compounding used, the thickness of
the product, etc. |
| Curing |
Maintenance of humidity and
temperature of freshly placed concrete during some definite period following
placing, casting, or finishing to assure satisfactory hydration of the
cementitious materials and proper hardening of the concrete. |
| Cushion-edged tile |
Tile on which the facial edges
have a distinct curvature that results in a slightly recessed joint. |
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|
Terms D-K
|
TERM |
DEFINITION |
|
Dead load |
A constant load that in
structures is due to the mass of the members, the supported structure, and
permanent attachments or accessories. |
| Decorative tile |
Tile with a ceramic decoration
on the surface. |
| Density |
The ratio of the mass of a
body to its volume, or the mass per unit volume of the substance. When
G.G.S. units are used, the density of a substance is numerically equal to
the specific gravity of the substance referred to water a 4 degrees C, the
maximum density (1,000) of water. For ordinary practical purposes, density
and specific gravity may be regarded as equivalent. |
| Double bullnose |
A type of trim with the same
convex radius on two opposite sides. |
| Dry pack |
Concrete or mortar mixtures
deposited and consolidated by dry packing. |
| Dry packing |
Placing of zero slump, or near
zero slump, concrete, mortar, or grout by ramming into a confined space. |
| Dry spots |
Small areas on the face of
tile which have been insufficiently glazed. |
| Dutchman |
A cut tile used as a filler in
the run of a wall or floor area. |
| Eagle Beak |
A 6 inch X 3/4 inch outside
corner trim shape. (AC106) |
| Efflorescence |
The residue deposited on the
surface of a material by the crystallization of soluble salts. |
| Encaustic |
Tile decorated with colored
clays inlaid and fired. Also colored tile laid in a wall or floor to form a
pattern. |
| Epoxy grout |
A two-part grout system
consisting of epoxy resin and epoxy hardener, especially formulated to have
impervious qualities, stain, and chemical resistance, used to fill joints
between tile units. |
| Epoxy mortar |
A two-part mortar system
consisting of epoxy resin and epoxy hardener used to bond tile to back-up
material where chemical resistance of high bond strength is a consideration. |
| Estimate |
Projected cost of materials
and labor for a construction project or portion of a project. |
| Expansion joint |
A joint through tile, mortar,
and reinforcing wire down to the substrate. |
| Extruded tile |
A tile or trim unit that is
formed when plastic clay mixtures are forced through a pug mill opening
(die) of suitable configuration, resulting in a continuous ribbon of formed
clay. A wire cutter or similar cut-off device is then used to cut the
ribbon into appropriate lengths and widths of tile. |
| Field tile |
An area of tile covering a
wall or floor. The field is bordered by tile trim. |
| Fire, bisque |
The process of kiln-firing
ceramic ware prior to glazing. |
| Fire, single |
The process of maturing an
unfired ceramic body and its glaze in one firing operation. |
| Flat trowel |
The flat trowel is used in
conjunction with the hawk for the transferring of mortar from the
mortarboard to the wall or to other vertical surfaces. It is frequently
used for spreading pure cement on the finished float coat. The flat trowel
also is used for spreading mortar on floor surfaces before tiles are set. |
| Float strip |
A strip of wood about 1/4 inch
thick and 1 1/4 inch wide. It is used as a guide to align mortar surfaces. |
| Floor tile |
A ceramic, glazed or unglazed
paver, quarry or mosaic tile resistant to abrasion and impact. |
| Frost proof tile |
Tile produced for use where
freezing and thawing conditions occur. |
| Glass mosaic tiles |
Tiles made of glass, usually
in sizes not over two inches square and 1/4 inch thick, mounted on sheets of
paper. Usually sheets are twelve inches square. |
| Glaze |
A ceramic coating matured to
the glassy state on a formed ceramic article. The term glaze also refers to
the material or mixture from which the coating is made. |
| Glazed tile |
Tile with a fused impervious
facial finish composed of ceramic materials, fused into the body of the tile
which may be a non-vitreous, semi-vitreous, vitreous, or impervious body.
The glazed surface may be clear, white, or colored. |
| Grout |
A rich or strong cementitious
or chemically setting mix used for filling tile joints. |
| Grout saw |
The grout saw is a saw-toothed
carbide steel blade mounted on a sometimes wooden handle. It is used to
remove old grout. |
| Impervious |
The degree of vitrification
evidenced visually by complete resistance to dye penetration. |
| Impervious tile |
Has water absorption of 0.5
percent or less. |
| In/Out corner |
Trim tile for turning a
right-angle inside or outside a wall corner. |
| Kiln cracks |
Cracks in tile, flat or trim,
occurring when the tile is fired. Typically, the cracks are from one outer
edge and do not go clear across the tile. |
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|
Terms L-O
|
TERM |
DEFINITION |
|
Lap joint |
A joint made by overlapping
adjacent edge areas of two adherends to provide facing surfaces which can be
joined with an adhesive. |
| Latex |
A water emulsion of a
synthetic rubber or plastic obtained by polymerization and used especially
in coatings and adhesives. |
| Latex grout |
A portland cement grout with a
special latex additive which results in a less rigid, less permeable grout
than regular portland cement grout. |
| Latex mortar |
A mixture of portland cement,
sand, and special latex additives which is used for bonding tile to back-up
material. It is less rigid than portland cement mortar. |
| Lath |
A wood strip or metal mesh,
which acts as a background or reinforcing agent for the scratch coat or
mortar coat. |
| Layout stick |
A long strip of wood marked at
the appropriate joint intervals for the tile to be used. It is used to
check the length, width, or height of the tile work. A common name for this
item is idiot stick. |
| Leaching |
Leaching is a condition where
liquids ooze out of the joint between ceramic tile veneer, regardless of the
veneer is grouted or not, and runs down over the tile. |
| Lime |
Specifically, calcium oxide,
also, loosely, a general term for the various chemical and physical forms of
quicklime, hydrated lime and hydraulic hydrated lime. |
| Limestone |
A sedimentary carbonate rock,
composed chiefly of calcite, but sometimes containing appreciable dolomite. |
| Live load |
The moving load or variable
weight to which a building is subjected, due to the weight of the people who
occupy it, the furnishings and other movable objects. |
| Load |
A force provided by weight or
mass (gravitational), external or environmental sources such as wind, water
and temperature, or other sources of energy. |
| Marble tiles |
Marble cut into tile sizes
twelve (12) inches squares of less, usually 1/2 inch to 3/4 inch think.
Several types of finishes are made, polished, honed, split faced, etc. |
| Mastic |
Organic tile adhesive. |
| Mexican paver tile |
Terra cotta-like tile, used
mainly for floors, and handmade. These tiles vary in color, texture and
appearance, from tile to tile and within each tile. They are available in
squares up to 12 inches, and in various shapes. These tiles are coated with
various types of sealers because of their soft adsorptive characteristics.
The coatings provide a wearing surface on the pavers which would otherwise
powder away under wear. |
| Mixing time |
The period during which the
constituents of a batch of concrete are mixed by a mixer; for a stationary
mixer, time is given in minutes from the completion of mixer charging until
beginning of discharge; for a truck mixer, time is given in good mixing in a
specific speed or expressed in terms of total revolutions at a specific
mixing speed. |
| Monocottura |
(Single-fired) A term used
for tile manufactured by a process which allows the simultaneous firing of
the clay with the glaze producing a finished tile with a single firing. |
| Mortar |
A mixture of cement paste and
fine aggregate; in fresh concrete, the material occupying the interstices
among particles of coarse aggregate; in masonry construction, mortar may
contain masonry cement, or may contain hydraulic cement with lime (and
possibly other admixtures) to afford greater plasticity and workability than
are attainable with standard hydraulic cement mortar. |
| Mosaics |
Small tiles or bits of tile,
stone, or glass. These are used to form a surface design or an intricate
pattern. |
| Mounted tile |
Tile assembled into units or
sheets by suitable material to facilitate handling and installation. Tile
may be face-mounted, back-mounted or edge-mounted. Face-mounted tile
assemblies may have paper or other suitable material applied to the face of
each tile, usually by water soluble adhesives so that is can be easily
removed after installation but prior to grouting of the joints.
Back-mounted tile assemblies may have perforated paper, fiber mesh, resin or
other suitable material bonded to the back and/or edges of each tile which
becomes an integral part of the tile installation. Back-mounted and
edge-mounted tile assemblies shall have a sufficient exposure of tile and
joints surrounding each tile to comply with bond strength requirements.
Tile manufacturers must specify whether back-mounted and edge-mounted tile
assemblies are suitable for installation in swimming pools, on exteriors
and/or in wet areas. |
| Mud |
A slang term for mortar. |
| Non-vitreous |
That degree of vitrification
evidenced by relatively high water absorption. |
| Notched trowels |
Notched trowels are available
in the serrated and square-tooth design. The teeth are made in various
sizes. The correct tooth size and depth must be used to apply the thickness
of bonding mortar specified. These trowels are used to apply all of the
various kinds of bonding materials for ceramic tile. When the teeth become
worn, the trowel has to be resharpened or replaced. |
| Open time |
The period of time during
which the bond coat retains its ability to adhere to the tile and bond the
tile to the substrate. |
| Organic adhesive |
A prepared organic material,
ready to use with no further addition of liquid or powder, used for bonding
tile to back-up material by the thin set method. Cures or sets by
evaporation. |
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Terms P-S
|
TERM |
DEFINITION |
|
Paper and wire |
Tar paper and wire mesh (or
metal lath) that are used as a backing for the installation of tile. |
| Paper mounted ceramic
mosaics |
Ceramic mosaic tiles mounted
on paper. Paper is applied to face of tile in sheets approximately twelve
(12) inches wide, twenty-four (24) inches long. |
| Pavers |
Unglazed porcelain or natural
clay tile formed by the dust-pressed method and similar to ceramic mosaics
in composition and physical properties but relatively thicker with 6 inch
square or more facial area. |
| Permeability |
The quality or condition of
allowing passage of liquids or gasses through a rubber layer. |
| Plasticizer |
A material that increases
plasticity of a cement paste, mortar, or concrete mixture. |
| Pointing trowel |
The pointing trowel or pointer
is probably the most essential tool in the trade. It comes in sizes ranging
from 4 to 6 inches in length, but the 6 inch trowel is the most popular.
The tile setter uses this trowel in every phase of the work, especially for
straightening tiles on walls and floors, marking floated surfaces, filling
small depressions on float coats, buttering tiles and trim work, and placing
mortar in areas that are too small the flat trowel. The butt of the handle
is used for tapping in tiles that are not on a true plane with the rest of
the tile work. The trowel's flat working surface must be protected. The
tile setter should not use it to pry or chop hardened materials such as
concrete or plaster. |
| Porcelain |
A glazed or unglazed vitreous
ceramic whiteware used for technical purposes. This term designates such
products as electrical, chemical, mechanical, structural, and thermal wares
when they are vitreous. |
| Porcelain process |
The method of producing glazed
ware by which a ceramic body and glaze are matured together in the same
firing operation. |
| Porosity, apparent |
The relationship of the open
pore space to the bulk volume, expressed in percent. |
| Pot life |
The period of time during
which a material maintains its workable properties after it has been mixed. |
| Prefloat |
The term used to describe
mortar that has been placed and allowed to harden prior to bonding tile to
it with thin-set materials. |
| Rubber trowel |
The rubber trowel used for
grouting is a non-porous synthetic-rubber-faced float that is mounted on an
aluminum back with a wood handle. This trowel is used to force material
deep into tile joints and to remove excess material for a perfect finish. |
| Rubbing stone |
A Carborundum stone that is
used to smooth the rough edges of tile. |
| Sag |
A term used when a wall
surface has developed a slide. |
| Scratch |
A mixture of portland cement,
sand, and water. |
| Sealer |
(1) A continuous film or
penetrant to prevent the passage of liquids or gaseous media; a high-bodied
adhesive generally of low cohesive strength to fill voids of various sizes
to prevent passage of liquid or gaseous media. (2) A coating used to seal
the sand-scratched surface of a primer in order to obtain a smooth uniform
paint base over rough metal. Sealers are products of low pigmentation. |
| Self-spacing tile |
Tile with lugs, spacers, or
protuberances on the sides. These devices automatically space the tile for
the grout joints. |
| Semi-vitreous |
3 percent to 7 percent water
absorption. |
| Set |
The condition reached by a
cement paste, mortar, or concrete when it has lost plasticity to an
arbitrary degree, usually measured in terms of resistance to penetration or
deformation; initial set refers to first penetration or deformation; initial
set refers to first stiffening; final set refers to attainment of
significant rigidity; also, strain remaining after removal of stress. |
| Shelf life |
Maximum interval during which
a material may be stored and remain in a usable condition. |
| Shower pan |
Terminology used in some areas
for Waterproof membrane. |
| Skid resistance |
A measure of the frictional
characteristics of a surface. |
| Slab |
A flat (although sometimes
ribbed on the underside) reinforced concrete element of a building which
provides the base for the floor or roofing materials. |
| Spacers |
T, Y and X shaped, they are
used in installation to separate tile on walls and floors. They are
manufactured in various thickness from 1/16 to 1/2. |
| Splash walls |
The walls of a tile drainboard
or bathtub. |
| Substrate |
The underlying support for the
ceramic tile installation. |
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Terms T-Z
|
TERM |
DEFINITION |
|
Terra cotta |
Hard baked clayware, including
tile, of variable color, averaging reddish red-yellow in hue and of high
saturation. |
| Thin-set |
A term used to describe the
bonding of tile with suitable materials applied approximately 1/8 inch
thick. |
| Tile cutter |
The tile cutter is one of the
most efficient and economic tools in the tile setting trade. A popular
model is the hand-drawn tile cutting board that is adjustable. |
| Tile nipper |
Special pliers that nibble
away little bites of ceramic tile to create small, irregular or curved cuts. |
| Underlayment |
An application of a relatively
thin layer of mortar primarily used to level out-of-plane surfaces such as
concrete slabs. |
| Unglazed tile |
A hard, dense tile of
homogeneous composition throughout, deriving color and texture from the
materials of which the body is made. The colors and characteristics of the
tile are determined by the materials used in the body, the method of
manufacture, and the thermal treatment. |
| Vapor Barrier |
Waterproof membrane placed
under concrete floor slabs that are placed on a grade. |
| Vitreous |
0.5 percent to 3 percent water
absorption. |
| Wall tile |
A glazed tile with a body that
is suitable for interior use and which is usually non-vitreous, and is not
required nor expected to withstand excessive impact. |
| Waterproof membrane |
A membrane, usually made of
built-up roofing, to provide a positive waterproof floor over the substrate,
which is to receive a tile installation using a wire reinforced mortar bed. |
| Weephole |
Opening at the base of a
shower drain to collect moisture collected above membrane and dispense it
into drain. |
| Wet area |
Interior or exterior tiled
areas subject to periodic or constant wetting. Examples: showers, sunken
tubs, pools, exterior walls, roofs, exterior paving and interior floors. |
| Wood float |
The wood float is sometimes
used in place of the flat trowel for floating mortar. It is good for
smoothing small irregularities left on the mortar bed, working the surface
of the mortar before troweling on the pure coat, or compacting floor and
deck mortar. |
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Quick Index: (
A-C ) ( D-K ) (
L-O ) ( P-S ) (
T-Z ) TOP

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