Using of Spent Foundry Sands for Production of Burned Ceramic Building Materials: Influence for Environment

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Mariusz Holtzer Józef Danko Rafal Danko Sylwia Zymankowska-Kumon
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
8
File Size:
518 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2013

Abstract

"Burning of ceramic materials is carried out at temperatures 900+ 1300°C, in dependence of the required functional properties. The Faculty of Foundry Engineering together with the Faculty of Material Engineering and Ceramics developed the technology of production of burned ceramic materials with using spent moulding and core sands. The mentioned above waste materials of the foundry industry fulfilled -in plastic masses intended for obtaining ceramic materials -the role of the addition weakening clay raw materials. The laboratory investigations were fully verified by the results of industrial tests. It should be pointed out that none negative effects were observed at the stage of mixing raw materials and preparation of plastic masses. The measurements of exhaust gases emissions performed during burning the products containing spent moulding sands as well as during the normal production did not exhibit any significant differences, which could have indicated the harmful impact on the natural environment.IntroductionSands are used by the foundry industry to make metal casting molds and are a mixture of silica sand, bentonite clay and carbonaceous additives or resins. During the casting process, the molten metal cause thermal decomposition of carbonaceous additives or resins, which results in the formation of potentially hazardous organics, that are emitted to the atmosphere and condense in the molding sand. Each year the U.S. foundry industry landfills about 10 million tones of sand because it is no longer suitable to make metal casting molds. A large high-silica sand content in spent foundry sands (SFSs) generates rational premises for their reuse in other than foundry practice fields. Efforts to divert the SFSs from landfills and encourage their beneficial use in manufactured soils, geotechnical applications, the construction industry (road construction, highway construction), the building materials industry (cement, bricks, limestone manufacture), in the filling of mining cavities or in landfill construction (roads on landfills, permanent covers) are make [1-7]."
Citation

APA: Mariusz Holtzer Józef Danko Rafal Danko Sylwia Zymankowska-Kumon  (2013)  Using of Spent Foundry Sands for Production of Burned Ceramic Building Materials: Influence for Environment

MLA: Mariusz Holtzer Józef Danko Rafal Danko Sylwia Zymankowska-Kumon Using of Spent Foundry Sands for Production of Burned Ceramic Building Materials: Influence for Environment. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2013.

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