Poultices for desalination

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Author: Hans-Jürgen Schwarz
English version by Sandra leithäuser
back to Desalination


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Tabelle 1: Most frequently used poultices (in accordance with [WTA_E 3-13-01/D:2003]The entry doesn't exist yet.)
Poultice composition Advantages Disadvantages
Pure cellulose fibres of different length - pH-neutral
- flexible, soft, adherent
- high water absorption
- low stability
- risk of mould formation
Bentonite, attapulgit, kaolin, pure or mixed with cellulose - high water retention capacity
- kaolin: in solution almost neutral,hardly any alkali can be mobilised
- extremely hard when high clay mineral content is present
- sometimes increased pH- values
- kaolin: risk of white residue on the surface
Clays (no further specification) - high water retention capacity - extremely hard
- sometimes increased pH-values
- contamination and soluble proportion unpredictable
Newspaper or paper pulp
predominantly cellulose/ hemicellulose/ lignin
- high water absorption - bleaches, additives and colors could be introduced
Cellulose-mixtures with high sand content - with good quality sands pH-neutral - properties vary
- difficult to process
- low stability
Clay mineral-cellulose-sand- mixture (different mixtures, commercially available, predominantly on bentonit basis) - good stability
- machine processable
- strength and shrinkage can be controlled through composition
- any mix can become too heavy or too hard
- sometimes increased pH-values
Clay minerals-light aggregates-mix, sometimes with cellulose - good stability
- machine processable
- low shrinkage, low density
- sometimes increased pH-values
- can become too hard, depending on the mix
- kaolin: risk of white residue on the surface