Abstract:
This work reports factory-scale development of cleaner ceramic bricks with the incorporation of hazardous nickel chromium electroplating sludge (NCS) obtained during chrome-plated steel production. The NCS is particularly rich in chromium and nickel, the two metals used for chrome plating. Earlier attempts to incorporate NCS in ceramic bricks faced substantial strength reduction due to heavy metals’ presence. We engineered a high-volume incorporation of pulverised coal fuel ash (PFA) along with NCS and tested 20 compositions with varying proportion of the three ingredients. The optimum composition was obtained with 37.5% PFA, 12.5% NCS, and remaining clay soil. The optimum composition bricks witnessed substantially enhanced density and compressive strength, reduced water absorption and efflorescence. XRD analysis indicated formation of spinel structure and mullite leading to strength enhancement. SEM analysis indicated increased pore filling in brick matrix with PFA cenospheres. XRF analysis revealed appreciable presence of fluxing oxides in NCS which facilitated the sintering process. Additionally, higher amount of reactive silica and alumina in PFA led to formation of stronger ceramic bonds. Leaching tests by Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure indicated negligible release of heavy metals, indicating successful immobilization of heavy metals. The developed methodology provides the relevant stakeholders an eco-friendly, economical, readily deployable scheme for eliminating the mounting NCS accumulation.