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  2. Fly ash brick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_ash_brick

    Fly ash bricks. Fly ash brick (FAB) is a building material, specifically masonry units, containing class C or class F fly ash and water. Compressed at 28 MPa (272 atm) and cured for 24 hours in a 66 °C steam bath, then toughened with an air entrainment agent, the bricks can last for more than 100 freeze-thaw cycles.

  3. Coal combustion products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_combustion_products

    Photomicrograph made with a scanning electron microscope and back-scatter detector: cross section of fly ash particles. Fly ash, flue ash, coal ash, or pulverised fuel ash (in the UK)—plurale tantum: coal combustion residuals (CCRs)—is a coal combustion product that is composed of the particulates that are driven out of coal-fired boilers together with the flue gases.

  4. Cenosphere - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cenosphere

    Fly ash sample containing ceramic cenospheres, magnified 40×. The process of burning coal in thermal power plants produces fly ash containing ceramic particles made largely of alumina and silica. They are produced at temperatures of 1,500 to 1,750 °C (2,730 to 3,180 °F) through complicated chemical and physical transformation.

  5. Portland cement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portland_cement

    Portland cement, blast furnace slag or fly ash and pozzolana * Constituents that are permitted in portland-composite cements are artificial pozzolans (blast furnace slag (in fact a latent hydraulic binder), silica fume, and fly ashes), or natural pozzolans (siliceous or siliceous aluminous materials such as volcanic ash glasses, calcined clays ...

  6. Brick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brick

    A version known as fly ash bricks, manufactured using fly ash, lime, and gypsum (known as the FaL-G process) are common in South Asia. Calcium-silicate bricks are also manufactured in Canada and the United States, and meet the criteria set forth in ASTM C73 – 10 Standard Specification for Calcium Silicate Brick (Sand-Lime Brick).

  7. Raichur Thermal Power Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raichur_Thermal_Power_Station

    RTPS generates about 1.5 million tonnes of fly ash annually which causes environmental problems. 20% of the ash produced is wet bottom ash which is let into the ash bund. [8] Though considered safer than fly-ash, bottom ash has also been found to contain heavy metals which can be dangerous to public health. The fly-ash which gets generated ...