Currently, the main destination for sludge from Drinking Water Treatment Plants (DWTP) is its disposal in sanitary landfills. However, its chemical composition and physical properties make it suitable for use as a building material. In this work, the use of spray-dried DWTP sludge on the manufacture of cladding ceramic material for the production of tiles as an alternative to the final disposal of sludge is analysed. The work is based on an experimental study carried out on a laboratory scale. Clay and spray-dried DWTP sludge (average humidity of 3 wt.%) were mixed with different percentages of sludge (from 0 to 70 wt.%) to form a slurry to be extruded. Specimens were then fired up to 980 ºC. Chemical and mineralogical composition of raw materials was analysed. Technical properties of the ceramic samples were determined. The results obtained showed that the DWTP sludge became a powder with low organic content and a high-micronised calcareous content (14.4 wt.% calcium oxide). The ceramic samples had a high open porosity, which increases with the increase in sludge addition percentage. They also had a high dilatometric coefficient. Taking into account these two properties, a possible application of this material would be the manufacture of glazed tiles. The resulting ceramic material does not pose any environmental problem, far surpassing the NEN-7345 leaching test and accelerated degassing tests (outgassing PSS-01-702 and offgassing PSS-01-729 standards of the European Space Agency).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.