Dense glass‐ceramics by fast sinter‐crystallization of mixtures of waste‐derived glasses
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In: International journal of applied ceramic technology, Vol. 17, No. 1, 01.01.2020, p. 55-63.
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Dense glass‐ceramics by fast sinter‐crystallization of mixtures of waste‐derived glasses
AU - Rabelo Monich, Patricia
AU - Vollprecht, Daniel
AU - Bernardo, Enrico
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Dense glass-ceramics were obtained by cold pressing and sinter-crystallization of a glass originated from the plasma gasification of municipal solid waste (“Plasmastone”) mixed with recycled soda-lime glass and kaolin clay. The optimum mixture featured 45% Plasmastone/45% soda-lime glass/10% kaolin clay and it was sintered according to a fast heat treatment (30 minutes at 1000°C with heating and cooling rates of approximately 40°C/min), mimicking that of industrial ceramic tiles. The fast treatment avoided extensive crystallization during heating, promoting the viscous flow. In this way, dense glass-ceramics with a water absorption below 0.7% could be produced. The developed tiles presented mechanical properties comparable to those of commercial ceramic tiles. Finally, the environmental impact assessment performed on these materials showed that the leaching of hazardous elements was particularly limited. Microprobe analyses indicated that heavy metals were incorporated in newly formed crystals, consisting mainly of hedenbergite, wollastonite, and iron oxide-rich “islands” surrounded by residual glass. The results show that Plasmastone, combined with recycled soda-lime glass and kaolin clay, may be converted in building materials, with a possible commercial exploitation.
AB - Dense glass-ceramics were obtained by cold pressing and sinter-crystallization of a glass originated from the plasma gasification of municipal solid waste (“Plasmastone”) mixed with recycled soda-lime glass and kaolin clay. The optimum mixture featured 45% Plasmastone/45% soda-lime glass/10% kaolin clay and it was sintered according to a fast heat treatment (30 minutes at 1000°C with heating and cooling rates of approximately 40°C/min), mimicking that of industrial ceramic tiles. The fast treatment avoided extensive crystallization during heating, promoting the viscous flow. In this way, dense glass-ceramics with a water absorption below 0.7% could be produced. The developed tiles presented mechanical properties comparable to those of commercial ceramic tiles. Finally, the environmental impact assessment performed on these materials showed that the leaching of hazardous elements was particularly limited. Microprobe analyses indicated that heavy metals were incorporated in newly formed crystals, consisting mainly of hedenbergite, wollastonite, and iron oxide-rich “islands” surrounded by residual glass. The results show that Plasmastone, combined with recycled soda-lime glass and kaolin clay, may be converted in building materials, with a possible commercial exploitation.
KW - crystallization
KW - crystals
KW - glass-ceramics
KW - sinter
KW - sintering
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85076880947&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://pure.unileoben.ac.at/portal/en/publications/dense-glassceramics-by-fast-sintercrystallization-of-mixtures-of-wastederived-glasses(79f135db-6118-45a2-a2a6-b2969b85afa6).html
U2 - 10.1111/ijac.13332
DO - 10.1111/ijac.13332
M3 - Article
VL - 17
SP - 55
EP - 63
JO - International journal of applied ceramic technology
JF - International journal of applied ceramic technology
SN - 1546-542X
IS - 1
ER -