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Teaching > Architectural
Conservation II (HP 382) >
Lime Cycle
The manufacture and setting of lime is chemically defined as three
separate processes:
- Burning or calcining of calcium carbonate
by which carbon dioxide gas is driven off at temperatures of about
800 degrees centigrade to produce lumplime or calcium oxide.
- Slaking or hydration of calcium hydroxide by
exothermic reaction with water to produce lime putty or calcium
hydroxide.
- Setting or carbonation of calcium hydroxide
by slow reaction with carbon dioxide in the air to produce calcium
carbonate. This series of reactions is called the lime cycle because
this cycle of burning, slaking and carbonation starts and ends
with calcium carbonate.
The chemistry of hydraulic lime is more complicated. Along with
the lime cycle processes described above, complex reactive clay
minerals are formed during the burning process which when wetted
in the presence of calcium hydroxide react to form a harder setting
material.
Source: Guide
To Lime - Lime Cycle, Limebase
Products, Ltd.

Source:The
Lime Cycle, Calch Ty-Mawr
Lime Limited, Ty-Mawr Farm, Llangasty, Brecon, Powys LD3 7PJ
UK

The
Lime Cycle - Illustration, The
Urban Conservation Glossary, School
of Town & Regional Planning, University
of Dundee
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