Lázár Marián, Hnatko Miroslav, Sedláček Jaroslav, Čarnogurská Mária, Brestovič Tomáš
Faculty of Mechanical Engineering, Technical University of Košice, Department of Power Engineering, Vysokoškolská 4, 042 00 Košice, Slovakia.
Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Dúbravská cesta 9, 84536 Bratislava, Slovakia.
Waste Manag. 2018 Aug;78:173-182. doi: 10.1016/j.wasman.2018.05.042. Epub 2018 May 29.
The paper reports on the experimental results obtained from the production of glassy slag by the plasma smelting of a mixture of two different wastes. The combination of two wastes with different chemical compositions is a promising way to optimise the energy consumption in the disposal process. Asbestos-cement roof tiles (ACRTs) and fly ash from fluidised-bed boilers (with a weight ratio of 1:1) were used for the preparation of glassy (vitrified) slag. The thermal process facilitated a 14.4% reduction of the weight of the original mixture and a 72% volume reduction of the waste. The glassy slag is then adopted as a raw material in the production of porous materials intended for various architectural applications, thus eliminating the necessity for its further disposal. The formation of a porous glass-ceramic matrix, using the vitrified slag containing CaSO as the pore-forming agent, is described in detail. A glass-ceramic foam with 66% porosity is formed by the rapid heating of the mixture of glassy slag and a 1 wt% of CaSO, consisting of crystallised calcium aluminosilicate (CaAlSiO, CaAlSiO). The thermal conductivity of the prepared porous material, measured by a laser flash thermal analysis, is 0.22 W·m·K.