Effect Of Calcium Carbonate On The Preparation Of Glass Ceramic Foams From Water-Quenched Titanium-Bearing Blast Furnace Slag And Waste Glass

Glass ceramic foams were fabricated with powder sintering technology at a low temperature (900 deg C) using water-quenched titanium-bearing blast furnace slag (WTS) and waste glass as the primary raw material. Additionally, calcium carbonate, sodium borate and sodium phosphate were chosen as sintering aids to form excellent performance products. The effects of calcium carbonate additions on foaming process, crystal content, morphology and properties of the prepared samples were systematically researched. The research indicates that increasing the calcium carbonate content made the foaming process harder and the pore size got more uniform. Consequently, the compressive strength and bulk density increased, while the porosity and water adsorption decreased.

Author
H Wang Et Al
Origin
Sichuan University, Chengdu, China
Journal Title
Advances In Appl Ceram 117 5 2018 312-318
Sector
Glass Fibre
Class
GF 755

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Effect Of Calcium Carbonate On The Preparation Of Glass Ceramic Foams From Water-Quenched Titanium-Bearing Blast Furnace Slag And Waste Glass
Advances In Appl Ceram 117 5 2018 312-318
GF 755
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