Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1695673 | Applied Clay Science | 2010 | 4 Pages |
Oil shale mining by-products were used as raw materials in a ceramic composition containing high amounts of kaolinitic clay materials developed for red stoneware tiles. The vitrification curve and linear shrinkage of the composition were determined by from dilatometry data. The microstructural changes of composition after sintering were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy. Red ceramic tiles were produced at low maximum firing temperature (water absorption < 0.5% at 1050 °C) and high mechanical strength (> 70 N/mm2) using this class of non-conventional raw materials.
Research Highlights►By-products of oil shale extraction used as raw materials. ►Kaolinitic clay minerals and red colors due to the presence of iron oxide. ►Red porcelain stoneware tiles, which showed characteristics of low porosity. ►Method of characterization of linear shrinkage based on dilatometry. ►Efficience in determining the vitrification curve.