Journal
JOURNAL OF MATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 40, Issue 19, Pages 5259-5264Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10853-005-4421-2
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The vitrification treatment has been successfully exploited as a solution for the disposal of polluted dredging spoils from the industrial area close to the Venice Lagoon. The addition of 20% by wt. of glass cullet to the calcined sediments in the vitrification batch provides a suitable chemical composition for the production of an inert glass, despite the compositional variations of the sediments. The obtained waste glass, after being finely ground, has been employed (i) as a raw material for the manufacture of sintered glass-ceramics, by cold pressing and single-step sintering at about 940 degrees C, and (ii) as sintering additive (the maximum addition being 10% by wt.) for the manufacture of traditional red single firing ceramic tiles, with a maximum firing temperature of 1186 degrees C. Both applications have proved to be promising: in the first case, the sintered glass ceramic product exhibits notable mechanical properties (bending strength > 130 MPa, HV approximate to 6.5 GPa); in the second case, the addition of waste glass does not modify substantially the investigated physical and mechanical properties of the traditional product (water absorption, linear shrinkage, bending strength, planarity). (c) 2005 Springer Science + Business Media, Inc.
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