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BULLETIN OF THE CHINESE CERAMIC SOCIETY ›› 2026, Vol. 45 ›› Issue (3): 1083-1093.DOI: 10.16552/j.cnki.issn1001-1625.2025.1124

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Effect of Low-Carbon Glass Batch Formulations on Glass Melting Process and CO2 Emissions

LIU Chenyu1,2(), ZHANG Wenlu1, LI Congyun1, ZENG Jianhua1, LI Luyao1(), HAN Jianjun1, WANG Jing1   

  1. 1.State Key Laboratory of Advanced Glass Materials,Wuhan University of Technology,Wuhan 430070,China
    2.School of Energy and Power Engineering,Huazhong University of Science and Technology,Wuhan 430070,China
  • Received:2025-11-14 Revised:2026-01-12 Online:2026-03-20 Published:2026-04-10
  • Contact: LI Luyao

Abstract:

The glass melting process is characterized by high energy consumption and significant carbon emissions, mainly resulting from the decomposition of carbonates in raw materials and the combustion of fuels. To explore the feasibility of carbon reduction from the raw material perspective, four glass batch formulations with a fixed target oxide composition were designed in this paper, including a conventional batch, two low-carbon batches without carbonates, and a batch containing 50% (mass fraction) cullet. Thermogravimetric-differential scanning calorimetry analysis combined with high-temperature melting experiments were conducted to investigate reaction heat, melting behavior, and CO2 emissions. The results show that the greatest synergistic benefit of energy saving and carbon reduction achieves when calcium silicate is used to replace calcium carbonate in traditional raw materials, in conjunction with NaOH as an efficient fluxing agent, reducing the theoretical total heat consumption by about 21.1% and the total CO2 emissions by 65.4% compared with the conventional batch. The incorporation of 50% cullet reduced the melting temperature by 50 ℃ compared with the conventional batch and achieved a 37.1% reduction in CO2 emissions, though its potential is limited by residual carbonates. In contrast, replacing carbonates with silicates without the assistance of efficient fluxing agents result in a 34.7% increase in energy consumption due to the elevated melting temperature. This study demonstrates that replacing carbonates with silicates and employing NaOH as an efficient fluxing agent constitutes an effective source-side decarbonization pathway for the glass industry. By clarifying the melting temperature and energy consumption levels of low-carbon raw material systems, this work provides theoretical guidance for optimizing raw material formulations design and supports the development of low-carbon glass production processes.

Key words: glass melting, carbon emission, low-carbon material, heat consumption, cullet

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