Các anh chị nào hiểu rõ về bản chất của dung dịch bentonite, đặc trưng kỹ thuật, tính chất của loại dung dịch này hoặc tài liệu về vấn đề này xin vui lòng giúp tôi. Chân thành cảm ơn.
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Dung dịch bentonite
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Ðề: Dung dịch bentonite
Cám ơn thầy Trung và các bác rất nhiều. Tuy nhiên trong tiêu chuẩn này chỉ đề cầp đến ứng dụng của bentonite. Tôi đang tìm tài liệu về cơ sở khoa học(cơ chế ổn định thành vách của dung dịch này). Có nghĩa là trong bentonite có khoáng gì tại sao lại có khả năng ổn định thành vách. Mong thầy và các bác khác giúp đỡ tiếp ạ.
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Ðề: Dung dịch bentonite
@khanhduy: Toi k biet nhieu ve Bentonite nen k giup dc nhieu. Chi biet Bentonite la ten goi khac cua khoang Montmoriolite (co loai Na va Ca). Toi scan dc it tai lieu noi so qua ve khoang Mont de bac co them ti thong tin de co the tim hieu o cac nguon khac, hoac c
o the tu rut ra dc ket luan. Chuc may man
http://www.yousendit.com/transfer.ph...03154E6199D6A6
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Ðề: Dung dịch bentonite
Cái này là một vấn đề rất quan trọng đối với công tác TC cọc khoan nhồi, nó có tính chất quyết định đối với chất lượng cọc. Tuy nhiên, quả thật là khó hiểu về đặc tính làm việc của nó, làm thế nào mà Bentonite có thể giữ được vách cọc KN nhỉ, đặc biệt là đối với loại đất rời rạc, rồi ngoài ra bây giờ người ta còn dùng rất nhiều các loại khác, tôi có nghe nói về CMC, và các hợp chất về Polyme v.v... nhưng quả thật là không hiểu lắm. Ngoài ra tài liệu chi tiết về các cái này tôi cũng không kiếm được. Bản thân đã tải đường link ở trên, tuy nhiên vẫn thấy rộng quá, và khó hiểu .
Vậy mong trên diễn đàn có ai chuyên về lĩnh vực này có thể nói kĩ cho anh em hiểu với.
Cám ơn rất nhiều!
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Ðề: Dung dịch bentonite
Tim dc cai nay o Wikipedia
Bentonite
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bentonite - USGS
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Bentonite - USGS
Bentonite is an absorbent aluminium phyllosilicate generally impure clay consisting mostly of montmorillonite, (Na,Ca)0.33(Al,Mg)2Si4O10(OH)2·(H2O)n. Two types exist: swelling bentonite which is also called sodium bentonite and non-swelling bentonite or calcium bentonite. It forms from weathering of volcanic ash, most often in the presence of water.
Contents
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* 1 Sodium bentonite
* 2 Calcium bentonite
* 3 Uses for both types
* 4 History and natural occurrence
* 5 References
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Sodium bentonite
Sodium bentonite expands when wet - it can absorb several hundred percent of its dry weight in water. It is mostly used in drilling mud in the oil and gas well drilling industries.
The property of swelling also makes sodium bentonite useful as a sealant, especially targeted for the sealing of subsurface disposal systems for spent nuclear fuel [1] [2] and for quarantining metal pollutants of groundwater. Similar uses include making slurry walls, waterproofing of below grade walls and forming other impermeable barriers (e.g. to plug old wells or as a liner in the base of landfills to prevent migration of leachate into the soil).
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Calcium bentonite
The non-swelling calcium bentonite is sold within the alternative health market for its purported cleansing properties. It is usually combined with water and ingested as part of a detox diet, [3] in a practice known as geophagy. It is claimed that the microscopic structure of the bentonite draws impurities into it from the digestive system, which are then excreted along with the bentonite. It is also claimed that native tribes in South America, Africa and Australia have long used bentonite clay for this purpose. [4]
Pascalite is another commercial name for the calcium bentonite clay.
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Uses for both types
Much of bentonite's usefulness in the drilling and geotechnical engineering industry comes from its unique rheological properties. Relatively small quantities of bentonite suspended in water form a viscous, shear thinning material. Most often, bentonite suspensions are also thixotropic, although rare cases of rheopectic behavior have also been reported. At high enough concentrations (~60 grams of bentonite per litre of suspension), bentonite suspensions begin to take on the characteristics of a gel (a material with finite yield strength).
Bentonite can be used in cement, adhesives, ceramic bodies, cosmetics and cat litter. Fuller's earth, an ancient dry cleaning substance, is finely ground bentonite. Bentonite, in small percentages, is used as an ingredient in commercially designed clay bodies and ceramic glazes. Bentonite clay is also used in pyrotechnics to make end plugs and rocket nozzles.
The ionic surface of bentonite has a useful property in making a sticky coating on sand grains. When a small proportion of finely ground bentonite clay is added to hard sand and wetted, the clay binds the sand particles into a moldable aggregate known as green sand used for making molds in sand casting. Some river deltas naturally deposit just such a blend of such clay silt and sand, creating a natural source of excellent molding sand that was critical to ancient metalworking technology. Modern chemical processes to modify the ionic surface of bentonite greatly intensify this stickiness, resulting in remarkably dough-like yet strong casting sand mixes that stand up to molten metal temperatures.
The same effluvial deposition of bentonite clay onto beaches accounts for the variety of plasticity of sand from place to place for building sand castles. Beach sand consisting of only silica and shell grains does not mold well compared to grains coated with bentonite clay. This is why some beaches are so much better for building sand castles than others.
The self-stickiness of bentonite allows high-pressure ramming or pressing of the clay in molds to produce hard, refractory shapes, such as model rocket nozzles. Indeed, to test whether a particular brand of cat litter is bentonite, simply ram a sample with a hammer into a sturdy tube with a close-fitting rod; bentonite will form a very hard, consolidated plug that is not easily crumbled.
Bentonite also has the interesting property of adsorbing relatively large amounts of protein molecules from aqueous solutions. It is therefore uniquely useful in the process of winemaking, where it is used to remove excessive amounts of protein from white wines. Were it not for this use of bentonite, many or most white wines would precipitate undesirable flocculent clouds or hazes upon exposure to warmer temperatures, as these proteins denature. It also has the incidental use of inducing more rapid clarification of both red and white wines.
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History and natural occurrence
The absorbent clay was given the name bentonite by an American geologist sometime after its discovery in about 1890 - after the Benton Formation (a geological stratum, at one time Fort Benton) in eastern Wyoming's Rock Creek area. Other modern discoveries include Montmorillonite discovered in 1847 in Montmorillon in the Vienne prefecture of France, in Poitou-Charentes, South of the Loire Valley and Pascalite discovered in about 1830 by French-Canadian fur trapper Emile Pascal atop the 8600-foot high Big Horn Mountains in Wyoming, USA.
Most high grade commercial sodium bentonite mined in the United States comes from the area between the Black Hills of South Dakota and the Big Horn Basin of Montana. Sodium bentonite is also mined in the southwestern United States, in Greece and in other regions of the world. Calcium bentonite is mined in the Great Plains, Central Mountains and south eastern regions of the United States. Supposedly the world's largest current source of bentonite is Chongzuo in China's Guangxi province.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bentonite
Toi nghi thong tin tren chi la so bo thoi. Con cac bac muon tim hieu ve mat khoa hoc thi chac phai tim o cac nguon khac.
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