Abstract

Asbestos is the common name applied to a group of natural, fibrous silicate minerals, which were once one of the most popular raw materials to be used in building materials. Asbestos was mainly used for the production of assortment asbestos–cement products. Today it is generally known that asbestos belongs to the group of hazardous materials and shows carcinogenic activity. In Poland, asbestos-containing materials are stored in special landfills. This is not the final solution to the asbestos problem because the fibrous structure of asbestos is still maintained. Therefore, methods based on recycling must be found which will be able to destroy asbestos’ dangerous fibrous structure. One of these methods may be thermal decomposition, where chemically combined water is released from the asbestos materials during heating. This leads to changes in the crystal structure and to the formation of new mineral phases. The aim of the preliminary research presented in this study was to determine the thermal behaviour as well as the structural and phase transformations of asbestos–cement materials during heating to high temperature. In the present study, three different types of asbestos-containing materials from Poland were examined. Differential thermal analysis, thermogravimetry with evolved gas analysis, X-ray diffraction, infrared spectroscopy and scanning electron microscopy were used to study the thermal decomposition of asbestos–cement samples. It was found that there were no significant differences between the type of asbestos–cement samples used—their thermal decomposition takes place in a similar way.

Highlights

  • Asbestos is the common name applied to a group of silicate minerals which have a fibrous crystal habit

  • Higher values of mass loss after ignition were obtained for asbestos–cement samples which had been exposed to external weather conditions, *23 and 26 %, respectively for the ACD and ACB samples

  • Effects which came from the decomposition of the cementitious matrix dominated in all Additional information on the thermal decomposition of asbestos–cement samples was provided by carrying out high-temperature TG/DTG measurements in connection with evolved gas analysis (EGA) (Fig. 6)

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Summary

Introduction

Asbestos is the common name applied to a group of silicate minerals which have a fibrous crystal habit. The aim of the preliminary research presented in this study was to determine the thermal behaviour as well as the structural and phase transformations of asbestos–cement materials during heating to high temperature. Asbestos minerals are naturally occurring hydrous silicates; they decompose to release chemically combined water by heating at high temperatures, which may lead to changes in the crystal structure and the formation of new phases without dangerous properties.

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