Cellular glass gravel used in the vegetable industry

logo_smallSGGC  (SchaumGlas Global Consulting GmbH) installed a production line for cellular glass gravel in the USA. The line is used for  hydroponic applications. This is a subset of hydroculture where plants are grown without soil. In this case, the roots are supported by the (cellular glass) gravel and have access to much more oxygen and exactly the amount of water they need.

usa1The above production line runs with fine powder waste glass, mixed with calcium carbonate and is heated with gas from landfill. The plant is built next to this landfill reducing transport to the minimum. The product they produce is called Growstones.

growstone-flag-302In fact, the roots of plants are settled into the Growstones, while all neceassary ingredients are introduced diluted in water. It seems that Growstones are the best material for this kind of hydroculture due to the best balance of water holding capacity and air filled porosity.

GS-NEW-CHART-3larger-1024x417

An in principle objective paper is given in this link.

technology_header

Anti abrasive products for cellular glass

logo_smallFrequently, customers are asking for an anti-abrasive coating for cellular glass. These products are originally developed for application on cellular glass for industrial equipment. Indeed, vibrating tubes insulated with cellular glass will possibly generate dust because the surface of cellular glass is brittle. With GOOGLE “anti abrasive cellular glass” , the following coatings were found.

tematiA good choice is Temati TDS Foster30-16, which is an organic coating, to be applied by spraying or brushing. This coating has been succesfully tested on GLAPOR cellular glass. This coating is fire resistant but is slightly combustible. It can be applied for a temperature range from -196°C to 130°C. This coating is reinforcing and filling the surface cell walls.

hydrocal-b11-usg_1For higher temperatures, HYDROCAL B11 has been tested. This is a reactive gypsum cement, which is filling the surface cells without reinforcing the surface cell walls. On the other hand, this product is absolutely non-combustible. Also this product is succesfully tested on GLAPOR cellular glass.

GLAPOR _logoThe above products are well suited to coat cellular glass used for facades but in contact with the inner space of the building. Indeed, more and more, building project developers are looking for alternative building systems without any combustible thermal insulation, mould and rodents. Large dimension GLAPOR cellular glass (3.2 x 1.5 x 0.2 m) in a steel frame, can function as wall AND thermal insulation. Within our knowledge, this is today the only solution.

 

 

Cement bonded foamed glass gravel

logo_smallIn some cases, a typical concrete slab could be too heavy for the structure under the slab. Some typical cases are a large football stadion where a large parking is build under the grass. To save weight, expensive cellular glass blocks have to be used instead of a concrete slab. In other cases, ecologic landscape construction, performed with unbonded gravel can become difficult in case of steep hills.

GLAPORlogoGLAPOR, manufacturer of cellular glass boards and gravel advises to use cement bonded gravel for landscaping instead of cellular glass boards, especially when permeability of water is an advantage. The structure is resistant against freeze and thaw and installation takes much less labour. On top of that, this solution is lot cheaper (about 60€/m³) and guarantees the same negligible creep behaviour as boards.

cement_boundTo demonstrate  the above we have a report (part 1 part2) about recipes for cement bonded gravel. It can be observed that compressive strengths of 1200 kPa are reached with foamed glass gravel with compressive stress of 800 kPa at 30% compaction. The cement bonding increases the mechanical stability with 50% with only a negligble shrinking during installation. Like shown in the report, mixing and transport can be done like ordinary concrete.

swarovskiOne of the nicest examples of landscape construction with GLAPOR foamed glass gravel is performed in Austria by Swarovski and  it contains the musem in Wattens. Indeed, Austria has great architects.

swarovski_v2016

 

 

 

 

 

In honor of Otto Anton Vieli

logo_smallGenerally we have commercially today three foaming recipes for closed cell cellular  glass. First there was the carbon system, which works under a reducing atmosphere. This system is still dominant in the production of boards. Later on, there was the SiC foaming agent and the organic foaming agent, dissolved in water glass. SiC is only used for the production of foamed glass gravel while the organic foaming agent in water glass shows up in gravel and boards.

The SiC system involves rather high foaming temperatures above 900°C, which shortens the life of the expensive belt on which the foaming happens. The carbon system involves a strong reducing atmosphere, which includes a rather low combustion efficiency. Both are dry methods, which generate a lot of dust during production.

schaum03The glycerin / water glass foaming agent is an alternative, which foams in a neutral atmosphere (high combustion efficiency) below 800°C, without generating any dust thanks to the water glass. This foam can be cut or broken after foaming without inducing any decoloring or other damage, which is important for gravel and board production. For board production from a continuous ribbon, annealing becomes a lot easier due to this cutting after foaming because temperature gradients only acts on the sawed stroke and not on the full ribbon. On top of that, the water glass improves the sintering behaviour of the glass powder, which is translated in a reduced grinding of the glass cullet.

From the above, it is clear that the glycerin / water glass foaming system is the future and this foaming system is indeed booming with boards and gravel. Reduced production cost, reduced investment and improved ecology are the main reasons.

ottoTherefore, we came interested to find the brilliant inventor of this process. We found a patent from Millcell AG in Switzerland with Otto Anton Vieli as inventor and also a US-patent version. The patent was filed in 1978 and was expired in 1998. Today, this process is booming without any royalties in Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Russia with at least 1000000 m³ cellular glass yearly.

millcell_fThe patent mentions that the organic foaming agent has to be dissolved in the water glass which is basically the reason why it can be used in a neutral atmosphere and sawing / cutting is possible at higher temperature without burning out of the foaming agent causing decoloring of the foam. Glycerin is the typical example of an organic foaming agent.

 

GLAPOR is renovating Diest in Belgium

logo_smallDiest is an old city in Belgium with for example a church built in 1253. As a consequence, old buildings with some history are renovated instead of demolished to keep the typical warm culture of Diest alive.

20170429_161011_resizedIn the Koning Albertstraat, an old building (1880) was bought for renovation by Pieter Wellens. The main building is kept while the extension is completely renovated from scratch.

For the floor insulation of the extension, GLAPOR RDS has been chosen due to its sustainability at a good price.

It was decided to insulate also the foundations of the old part, constructed with bricks and a lime mortar. Newly developed high density GLAPOR cellular glass will be installed with a Unilit TD 1320 mortar between foundation and wall.

IMG-20170509-WA0000_resizedThis high density cellular glass (160 kg/m³, about 300€/m³) is installed without (bitumen) coating and for that reason a lime mortar is needed. Compressive strength of cellular glass and mortar exceeds largely 2000 kPa. All the cellular glass, used in this project is manufactured for 100% from waste glass, unsuited for the production of new bottles or windows.

wellensAlthough GLAPOR made a large effort to deliver at an attractive price, the major challenge is for Pieter Wellens, who decided to renovate in the city instead of building from scratch outside the city. Renovating old buildings is ecology at the best.

20170429_160917_resizedIMG-20170518-WA0000_resized

Above we see how the floor insulation of the extension has been done. Special GLAPOR boards (RDS system) are enclosing the gravel and will serve later as form work for the concrete slab on top of the foamed glass gravel. Due to the lack of space in the city, the gravel is unloaded from big bags.

On top of the GLAPOR structure with the concrete slab, a passive housing construction of ISOVARIANT will be build. ISOVARIANT is based on EPS and contains the concrete wall. It serves as form work for the concrete and as thermal insulation. The load of the walls and rest of the building  is distributed over the vibrated GLAPOR gravel system by the concrete slab.

isovariant1

GLAPOR system sustaining the concrete slab

 

isovariant2

ISOVARIANT system on the thermally insulated concrete slab

 

 

 

Cellular glass beyond the usual

logo_smallCellular glass is known as a thermal insulation in two shapes: boards and gravel. It is used in the building industry and for industrial applications. The first sold production was based on a special glass composition and recycled glass was careful introduced with remelting at temperatures around 1500°C. The final high quality product was never adapted to the availability of recycled glass.

gravelAt the other side, R&D was performed to find more direct applications of recycled glass and cellular glass gravel was developed. First SiC was used as a foaming agent for gravel but this process involves higher foaming temperature above 900°C and has a tendency to induce open cells (crystallisation) when a too low density was the target. Gravel is continuously foamed on a steel belt which has a short life at 900°C and higher energy consumption. In my opinion, this SiC process will disappear due to the high energy cost and short belt life as a consequence of the high foaming temperature.

foamit1A smart (Bulgarian?) individual developed the glycerin / sodium silicate process for gravel, which was already reported in a post. GLAPOR introduced first the large width foaming with this recipe to cut the production cost. Later on the cellular glass market was expanded from floor insulation to road works and other civil engineering work. A Finnish company FOAMIT is showing the way to these alternative applications.

embankmentThe following files can be downloaded from their site.

The last file is a paper about an embankment with cellular glass gravel. I give the following citation, which says everything about the advantages and cost saving thanks to cellular glass gravel.

Normal gravel filling was not an option, since it would have caused stability problems, lateral stresses to the piles and increased the strength demands on piles and sheet pile wall anchors. Organizing the temporary traffic over piled structures would have been a costly solution. For these reasons foamed glass was chosen to lighten the embankment load. Foamed glass was also chosen because of its technical and structural qualities, usability and recyclability. Foamed glass’s low unit weight lightened the loads on the subsoil and high friction angle together with low unit weight minimized the lateral stresses against the sheet pile walls. Because of the high friction angle, it was even possible to construct steep embankments without support levels and structures beside foamed glass embankment. Up to 10 000 m3 of foamed glass was delivered to four different embankments on the construction site. The foamed glass will be reused, after the construction of the new bridge abutments, for example in backfills of the market
building and the surrounding roads. Lack of work space near the abutments required a narrower structure, which was achieved by placing the foamed glass between two sheet pile walls.

road

Pre-fabricated cellular glass flat roof

logo_smallThe stardard method for a well insulated flat roof is to put the thermal insulation on a concrete, steel or even wooden deck. In the case of cellular glass, the most popular method is still to push the boards into liquid hot bitumen. The hot bitumen rises in the joints and a certain overflow has to be present for a vapor tight roof. As a consequence, the weather conditions are rather stringent to construct a quality roof.

20170306_154042However, recently in Norway another method is used due to the availability of large monolithic cellular glass boards 2.8m x 1.5m x 0.18m from GLAPOR. The boards are assembled to large panels up to 8m x 2.5m x 0.25m thickness. Afterwards, the panels are coated with a reinforcing product. This work is done inside independent of the weather conditions.

20170306_162459Later on, the large assembled GLAPOR cellular glass panels are put on the roof with a crane and a final coating is performed on the top surface as waterproofing. These panels are self supporting which means that only beams are needed to support the roof. In principle, steel, concrete or wood deck are not necessary anymore in the roof structure, reducing significantly the cost.

20170309_154952The construction of the 25cm thick insulating roof panel is shown in the pictures. In our opinion, the future of cellular glass is to be used for large self supporting panels instead of only insulating structures. For the last option, plenty of low stiffness alternatives like XPS, EPS, MW, … are available. This future for cellular glass was born when Walter Frank at GLAPOR has built the first continuous foaming production line for larger sizes.

 

The GLAPOR obelisk

logo_smallThe old Egyptians invented the obelisk and were also producing the first glass. GLAPOR combined both and installed the first foamed glass gravel obelisk.

20170405_122551_resizedFoamed glass gravel is most of time used to fill a dwell (floor insulation) or to make a hill (garden landscape). In these cases, the gravel is installed and vibrated to a 30% more compact system. But it is also posibble to mix the gravel with a special adhesive, which allows to form a certain shape.

GLAPOR has chosen for an obelisk, which is also demonstrating that only the sky is the limit for cellular glass. The Egyptians have put the obelisk at the entrance of a temple. In this case, the obelisk guards the entrance of white and blue collars to show the equal importance of both in the succesful story of GLAPOR.

images

Prefabricated building with cellular glass

logo_smallPrefabricated building had never an image of durability but this could change now very fast. In a previous blog, we mentionned already the C-element, a system which uses large GLAPOR cellular glass boards. Today, theory became practice.

logoIndeed, on their website, they show now how this prefabrication is done. They started with 80 x 120 cm GLAPOR boards but later on, they were using 2.4 x 1.5m GLAPOR boards. Also the first (small) prefabricated building is shown. I copied a few pictures from the website showing prefabrication and installation.

design-img9.jpg

design-img11

In the next blog, we will discuss the patent, which is protecting this invention. This invention will change the buidling world a lot and this is only the beginning.

 

Acoustic absorption with open cell foam glass

logo_smallWe found a paper from 2011 about waste glass foaming with CaCO3.

The porous glass ‘foam glass’ is considered as the new glass products fulfill certain requirements in the building industry in particular (thermal and acoustic insulation). The production of foam glass based waste glass plays an important role in environmental protection and also gains in energy. As part of present work, we seek to improve the properties of glass to obtain a building material lighter with excellent insulation properties. The properties of foam glass depend on the porosity and morphology. The present work devoted to analyze the microstructure of the glass produced by scanning electron microscopy and optical microscopy to be more precise on the size and shape of pores constitute this material.

Algeria

A mixture of glass and 1% foaming agent was compressed and heated up to 850°C. A white foam was obtained. The author found a high open porosity (85%) and a thermal conductivity of 0.031 W/mK, which is a doubtful value for such a large density and which is measured on a small sample. The author describes nicely the principle of acoustic absorption and finds a sound attenuation of 15 dB.

Noise and noise attenuation are becoming important topics next to thermal insulation. Unfaced mineral wool is very efficient but less interesting for the inside air. I guess there is a new future for cellular glass but this time with open cells.