[Stoves] A heat-resistant insulation mix

Crispin Pemberton-Pigott crispinpigott at gmail.com
Wed Aug 10 09:02:10 CDT 2011


Sodium silicate

 

>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Sodium metasilicate

Other names

Liquid glass

Waterglass

Properties

 

Molecular formula

Na2O3Si

 

Molar mass

122.06 g mol−1

 

Appearance

White, opaque crystals

 

Density

2.4 g cm-3

 

Melting point

 

1088 °C, 1361 K, 1990 °F

 

Sodium silicate is the common name for a compound sodium metasilicate, Na2SiO3, also known as water glass or liquid glass. It is available in aqueous solution and in solid form and is used in cements, passive fire protection, refractories, textile and lumber processing, and automobiles. Sodium carbonate and silicon dioxide react when molten to form sodium silicate and carbon dioxide:[1]

Na2CO3 + SiO2 → Na2SiO3 + CO2 

 

Anhydrous sodium silicate contains a chain polymeric anion composed of corner shared {SiO4} tetrahedral, and not a discrete SiO32− ion.[1] In addition to the anhydrous form, there are hydrates with the formula Na2SiO3·nH2O (where n = 5, 6, 8, 9) which contain the discrete, approximately tetrahedral anion SiO2(OH)22− with water of hydration. For example, the commercially available sodium silicate pentahydrate Na2SiO3·5H2O is formulated as Na2SiO2(OH)2·4H2O and the nonahydrate Na2SiO3·9H2O is formulated as Na2SiO2(OH)2·8H2O.[2]

In industry, the different grades of sodium silicate are characterized by their SiO2:Na2O ratio, which can vary between 2:1 and 3.75:1.[3] Grades with this ratio below 2.85:1 are termed 'alkaline'. Those with a higher SiO2:Na2O ratio are described as 'neutral'.

 

Regards

Crispin

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