4.7 Article

Recycle of waste glass into glass-ceramic stoneware

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY
Volume 91, Issue 7, Pages 2156-2162

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1551-2916.2008.02460.x

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The reuse of soda-lime-silica scrap or waste glasses as additives for traditional ceramics has been investigated extensively in the literature. Although interesting, this solution does not generally allow large quantities of glass to be recycled. This study reports a novel high glass recycle approach that replaces, in the formulation of porcelain stoneware, the feldspar flux with finely powdered glass derived from the melting of different waste products, e.g. lime from fume abatement systems, feldspar mining residues, and scrap soda-lime glass. At an optimized glass/clay ratio, the glass-ceramic stoneware samples sinter at 1000 degrees C. The glass-ceramic stoneware has a bending strength approaching 90 MPa and a fracture toughness exceeding 2.0 MPa.m(0.5), similar to those of conventional porcelain stoneware, which requires sintering at higher temperatures. The high strength and fracture toughness are attributed to the interaction between the glass and clay residues upon sintering, which allows the development of several different crystalline phases.

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