paulo1913 Posted December 13, 2007 Posted December 13, 2007 im doing an ivestigatory project in chemistry and im thinking of making ceramics out of volcanic ash (SiO2) and eggshells (CaCO3) as a cementing reagent. im a geology student and my professor asked us to make a project related to our major. so my questions are: -is it possible to make ceramics out of eggshells and volcanic ash -can i use eggshell as a super glue? do i have to melt it or just add chemicals thanks...
Melvin Posted December 14, 2007 Posted December 14, 2007 I would use oyster shells instead of egg shells for CaCO3. Egg shells have various proteins and other contaminants that oyster shells don't.
John Cuthber Posted June 12, 2008 Posted June 12, 2008 I'm not a geochemist, but doesn't "volcanic ash" cover a huge range of possible materials?
SkepticLance Posted June 12, 2008 Posted June 12, 2008 I dunno about ceramics, but you could, in theory, make cement out of those two. Heat the eggshells to quicklime, and blend with the right volcanic ash. The ancient Romans discovered cement and built concrete structures. Their recipe involved heating ground up limestone for the quicklime and a local volcanic ash.
DeanK2 Posted June 18, 2008 Posted June 18, 2008 The quicklime would most certainably be availbale from the shell, but the amount of eggs needed is probably ten times what the supermarket stacks (for a respectable amount of cement). However, it would be straightforward to purify, once obtained.
SkepticLance Posted June 18, 2008 Posted June 18, 2008 Looking back over my last post, I realised I forgot to add an important detail. Cement is made by a chemical reaction between Calcium alkali and silicate. The Romans did it by mixing ground limestone and volcanic ash together and heating them in a furnace together. Under the heat, the limestone became quicklime which reacted with the silicates in the ash to form the mixture of Calcium Aluminium silicate materials we know as cement.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now