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Calcination is thermal treatment of a solid chemical compound (e.g. mixed ) whereby the compound is raised to high temperature without melting under restricted supply of ambient (i.e. gaseous O2 fraction of air), generally for the purpose of removing impurities or volatile substances and/or to incur thermal decomposition.

The root of the word calcination refers to its most prominent use, which is to remove carbon from (calcium carbonate) through to yield . This calcination reaction is CaCO3(s) → CaO(s) + CO2(g). Calcium oxide is a crucial ingredient in modern , and is also used as a chemical flux in . Industrial calcination generally emits ().

A calciner is a steel cylinder that rotates inside a heated furnace and performs indirect high-temperature processing (550–1150 °C, or 1000–2100 °F) within a controlled atmosphere.


Etymology
The process of calcination derives its name from the Latin calcinare 'to burn lime'Mosby's Medical, Nursing and Allied Health Dictionary, Fourth Edition, Mosby-Year Book Inc., 1994, p. 243 due to its most common application, the decomposition of calcium carbonate () to () and , in order to create . The product of calcination is usually referred to in general as "calcine", regardless of the actual minerals undergoing thermal treatment.


Industrial processes
Calcination is carried out in furnaces or reactors (sometimes referred to as or calciners) of various designs including shaft furnaces, , multiple hearth furnaces, and fluidized bed reactors.

Examples of calcination processes include the following:


Reactions
Calcination reactions usually take place at or above the thermal decomposition temperature (for decomposition and volatilization reactions) or the transition temperature (for ). This temperature is usually defined as the temperature at which the standard Gibbs free energy for a particular calcination reaction is equal to zero.


Limestone calcination
In limestone calcination, a decomposition process that occurs at 900 to 1050°C, the chemical reaction is

Today, this reaction largely occurs in a .

The standard Gibbs free energy of reaction in J/mol is approximated as Δ G° r ≈ 177,100 J/mol − 158 J/(mol*K) * T.

(1989). 9780080366128, Pergamon Press.
The standard free energy of reaction is 0 in this case when the temperature, T, is equal to 1121K, or 848 °C.


Oxidation
In some cases, calcination of a metal results in of the metal to produce a metal oxide. In his essay " Formal response to the question, why Tin and Lead increase in weight when they are calcined" (1630), Jean Rey notes that "having placed two pounds six ounces of fine English tin in an iron vessel and heated it strongly on an open furnace for the space of six hours with continual agitation and without adding anything to it, he recovered two pounds thirteen ounces of a white calx". He claimed "That this increase in weight comes from the air, which in the vessel has been rendered denser, heavier, and in some measure adhesive, by the vehement and long-continued heat of the furnace: which air mixes with the calx (frequent agitation aiding) and becomes attached to its most minute particles: not otherwise than water makes heavier sand which you throw into it and agitate, by moistening it and adhering to the smallest of its grains", presumably the metal gained weight as it was being oxidized.

At room temperature, tin is quite resistant to the impact of air or water, as a thin oxide film forms on the surface of the metal. In air, tin starts to oxidize at a temperature of over 150 °C: Sn + O2 → SnO2.

Antoine Lavoisier explored this experiment with similar results time later.


Alchemy
In , calcination was believed to be one of the 12 vital processes required for the transformation of a substance.

Alchemists distinguished two kinds of calcination, actual and potential. Actual calcination is that brought about by actual fire, from wood, coals, or other fuel, raised to a certain temperature. Potential calcination is that brought about by potential fire, such as corrosive chemicals; for example, gold was calcined in a reverberatory furnace with mercury and ; silver with common salt and ; with salt and ; with salammoniac and ; tin with ; lead with sulfur; and mercury with .

There was also philosophical calcination, which was said to occur when horns, hooves, etc., were hung over boiling water, or other liquor, until they had lost their , and were easily reducible into powder.

According to the obsolete phlogiston theory, the '' was the true elemental substance that was left after phlogiston was driven out of it in the process of .

(2025). 9780191726569, Oxford University Press.

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