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Calcium Stearate
PVC stablizer

Zinc Stearate
For Plastic&Rubber
 
Rubber Grade S
tearic Acid
Especially for rubber pipe and tyre industry.

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Calcium Carbonate

Introduction of Calcium Carbonate

Calcium carbonate
IUPAC name
 [show]
Calcium carbonate
Other names Limestone; calcite; aragonite; chalk; marble
Identifiers
CAS number [471-34-1]
RTECS number FF9335000
ChemSpider ID 9708
Properties
Molecular formula CaCO3
Molar mass 100.087 g/mol
Appearance Fine white powder.
Density 2.71 g/cm3 (calcite)
2.83 g/cm3 (aragonite)
Melting point

825 °C (calcite)
1339 °C (aragonite)

Boiling point

decomposes

Solubility in water .00015 mol/L (25°C)
Solubility product, Ksp 4.8 × 10-9[1]
Solubility in dilute acids soluble
Structure
Crystal structure Trigonal
Space group 32/m
Hazards
MSDS ICSC 1193
EU Index Not listed
Flash point Non-flammable
Related compounds
Other anions Calcium bicarbonate
Other cations Magnesium carbonate
Strontium carbonate
Barium carbonate
Related compounds Calcium sulfate
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for
materials in their
standard state
(at 25 °C, 100 kPa)

Infobox references
Calcium carbonate is a chemical compound with the chemical formula CaCO3. It is a common substance found in rock in all parts of the world, and is the main component of shells of marine organisms, snails, pearls, and eggshells. Calcium carbonate is the active ingredient in agricultural lime, and is usually the principal cause of hard water. It is commonly used medicinally as a calcium supplement or as an antacid, but high consumption can be hazardous。

 Capacity of Calcium Carbonate

We have the capacity exportation calcium carbonate with the quantities over 100 000MT yearly .Offer the calcium carbonate

Especially Nano calcium carbonate and the calcium carbonate for plastic industry usage .

Industrial applications of Calcium Carbonate

The main use of calcium carbonate is in the construction industry, either as a building material in its own right (e.g. marble) or limestone aggregate for roadbuilding or as an ingredient of cement or as the starting material for the preparation of builder's lime by burning in a kiln.

Calcium carbonate is also used in the purification of iron from iron ore in a blast furnace. Calcium carbonate is calcined in situ to give calcium oxide, which forms a slag with various impurities present, and separates from the purified iron.

Calcium carbonate is also used in the oil industry in drilling fluids as a formation bridging and filtercake sealing agent and may also be used as a weighting material to increase the density of drilling fluids to control downhole pressures.

Calcium carbonate is also one of the main sources used in growing Seacrete, or Biorock.

Precipitated Calcium carbonate, pre-dispersed in slurry form, is also now widely used as filler material for latex gloves with the aim of achieving maximum saving in material and production costs.

Calcium carbonate is widely used as an extender in paints,[5] in particular matte emulsion paint where typically 30% by weight of the paint is either chalk or marble.

Calcium carbonate is also widely used as a filler in plastics.[5] Some typical examples include around 15 to 20% loading of chalk in uPVC drain pipe, 5 to 15% loading of stearate coated chalk or marble in uPVC window profile. PVC cables can use calcium carbonate at loadings of up to 70 phr (parts per hundred parts of resin) to improve mechanical properties (tensile strength and elongation) and electrical properties (volume resistivity). Polypropylene compounds are often filled with calcium carbonate to increase rigidity, a requirement that becomes important at high use temperatures.[6] It also routinely used as a filler in thermosetting resins (Sheet and Bulk moulding compounds)[6] and has also been mixed with ABS, and other ingredients, to form some types of compression molded "clay" Poker chips.

Fine ground calcium carbonate is an essential ingredient in the microporous film used in babies' diapers and some building films as the pores are nucleated around the calcium carbonate particles during the manufacture of the film by biaxial stretching.

Calcium carbonate is also used in a wide range of trade and DIY adhesives, sealants, and decorating fillers.[5] Ceramic tile adhesives typically contain 70 to 80% limestone. Decorating crack fillers contain similar levels of marble or dolomite. It is also mixed with putty in setting stained glass windows, and as a resist to prevent glass from sticking to kiln shelves when firing glazes and paints at high temperature.

Calcium carbonate is known as whiting in ceramics/glazing applications,[5] where it is used as a common ingredient for many glazes in its white powdered form.

In North America, calcium carbonate has begun to replace kaolin in the production of glossy paper. Europe has been practicing this as alkaline papermaking or acid-free papermaking for some decades.

It is used in swimming pools as a pH corrector for maintaining alkalinity "buffer" to offset the acidic properties of the disinfectant agent.

It is commonly called chalk as it has been a major component of blackboard chalk. Chalk may consist of either calcium carbonate or gypsum, hydrated calcium sulfate CaSO4·2H2O.

Ground calcium carbonate is further used as an abrasive (both as scouring powder and as an ingredient of household scouring creams), in particular in its calcite form, which has the relatively low hardness level of 3 on the Mohs scale of mineral hardness, and will therefore not scratch glass and most other ceramics, enamel, bronze, iron, and steel, and have a moderate effect on softer metals like aluminium and copper.

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