Rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: A review

Use of waste or by-products from different industries and the agricultural sector has received increasing attention in the scientific, technology, ecological, economic and social spheres in recent years. Rice husk (RH) is a by-product of rice milling and rice husk ash (RHA) is generated by combustio...

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Main Authors: SK S. Hossain, Lakshya Mathur, P.K. Roy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-10-01
Series:Journal of Asian Ceramic Societies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21870764.2018.1539210
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spelling doaj-5359f9e695504fb3a24dc29d355b818e2021-05-02T13:55:53ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Asian Ceramic Societies2187-07642018-10-016429931310.1080/21870764.2018.15392101539210Rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: A reviewSK S. Hossain0Lakshya Mathur1P.K. Roy2IIT (BHU)IIT (BHU)IIT (BHU)Use of waste or by-products from different industries and the agricultural sector has received increasing attention in the scientific, technology, ecological, economic and social spheres in recent years. Rice husk (RH) is a by-product of rice milling and rice husk ash (RHA) is generated by combustion in a separate boiler. Both RH and RHA are abundantly accessible in rice growing countries such as China, India, Brazil, the USA, and Southeast Asia. RH has therefore been recycled by burning it for energy production. This generates RHA, which contains a huge quantity (85–95%) of amorphous silica. Over the past two decades, RHA has been used extensively in numerous fields for manufacturing of different silicates, zeolites, catalysts, nanocomposite, cement, lightweight construction materials, insulators, and adsorbents. This paper presents a comprehensive overview on the processing of nano-silica from RH/RHA. It tries at the same time, to present a critical review of the application of RHA as an ingredient for the production of various ceramic materials, e.g. refractory, glass, whiteware, oxide and non-oxide ceramics, silica aerogel and SiO2/C composites. In summary, amorphous silica derived from RHA or RH provides a potential alternative to conventional silica sources (e.g. quartz) for the manufacture of value-added ceramics for practical applications.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21870764.2018.1539210Rice huskrice husk ashwasteceramicsilica
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author SK S. Hossain
Lakshya Mathur
P.K. Roy
spellingShingle SK S. Hossain
Lakshya Mathur
P.K. Roy
Rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: A review
Journal of Asian Ceramic Societies
Rice husk
rice husk ash
waste
ceramic
silica
author_facet SK S. Hossain
Lakshya Mathur
P.K. Roy
author_sort SK S. Hossain
title Rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: A review
title_short Rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: A review
title_full Rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: A review
title_fullStr Rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: A review
title_full_unstemmed Rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: A review
title_sort rice husk/rice husk ash as an alternative source of silica in ceramics: a review
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal of Asian Ceramic Societies
issn 2187-0764
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Use of waste or by-products from different industries and the agricultural sector has received increasing attention in the scientific, technology, ecological, economic and social spheres in recent years. Rice husk (RH) is a by-product of rice milling and rice husk ash (RHA) is generated by combustion in a separate boiler. Both RH and RHA are abundantly accessible in rice growing countries such as China, India, Brazil, the USA, and Southeast Asia. RH has therefore been recycled by burning it for energy production. This generates RHA, which contains a huge quantity (85–95%) of amorphous silica. Over the past two decades, RHA has been used extensively in numerous fields for manufacturing of different silicates, zeolites, catalysts, nanocomposite, cement, lightweight construction materials, insulators, and adsorbents. This paper presents a comprehensive overview on the processing of nano-silica from RH/RHA. It tries at the same time, to present a critical review of the application of RHA as an ingredient for the production of various ceramic materials, e.g. refractory, glass, whiteware, oxide and non-oxide ceramics, silica aerogel and SiO2/C composites. In summary, amorphous silica derived from RHA or RH provides a potential alternative to conventional silica sources (e.g. quartz) for the manufacture of value-added ceramics for practical applications.
topic Rice husk
rice husk ash
waste
ceramic
silica
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21870764.2018.1539210
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AT pkroy ricehuskricehuskashasanalternativesourceofsilicainceramicsareview
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