4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

Establishing correlations among pore structure, surface roughness, compressive strength, and fracture toughness of ceramic water filters local to Rajasthan, India

Journal

DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT
Volume 157, Issue -, Pages 332-341

Publisher

DESALINATION PUBL
DOI: 10.5004/dwt.2019.23693

Keywords

Clay-organic ceramics; Surface roughness; Porosity; Fracture toughness; Strength; Microstructure

Funding

  1. department of science technology [YSS/2014/00576]

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This article discusses the characterization of local clay-organic (CO) ceramics used in the microfiltration application in India. Local clay and sawdust were the raw materials for these ceramics. Wet mix with specified volume fractions of these raw materials was hydroplastically formed to square plates, cured, and fired at 850 degrees C. Once fired, these ceramics showed a prominent presence of silica, alumina, and oxides of iron. Quartz, potassium feldspar, and hematite are the major minerals in these ceramics. The dominance of pores orthogonal to the surface was a feature in this family of ceramics. The 50O composition of the CO ceramics is observed to have a maximum frequency of orthogonal pores. Therefore, an example of gravity-based filtration flow models of this material shaped in distinct forms is carried out to enumerate possible scaling. The surface roughness of the cured specimen plate varies linearly with the porosity of the mixture. The compressive strength shows a polynomial increase with an increase in the values of surface roughness. The fracture toughness is a linear function of the surface roughness of these CO ceramics.

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