Slags from roasting of antimony ore in the Brioude-Massiac (France) area used as aggregates: An early example of circular economy

JOURNAL OF MICROSCOPY(2024)

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Abstract
Towards the end of the 19th century and the early 20th century, France was the world's largest producer of antimony, especially due to the rich deposits in the Brioude-Massiac area. Even though all the mining and smelting activities are long gone, there are still some remains of those activities. The most original of those is the use of roasting slags as aggregates in former plant walls or industrial building. They are macroscopically characterised by a black or red colour with a vesicular aspect similar to natural pozzolanas. Common petrography and mineralogy tools have been used to characterise those slags: optical mineralogy, scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS) and X-ray diffraction (XRD). To gain an insight into their mineral complexity, a QEMSCAN map has been produced. The mineralogy is typical of high-temperature slags: cristobalite, quartz, mullite, fayalite-forsterite series and spinel. The antimony content is quite high, up to seven percent, under the form of various antimony oxides and native antimony. In the Brioude-Massiac area, France, antimony has been heavily mined at the end of the 19th century, giving rise to the generation of large amounts of wastes from the metallurgy of the ores. Those wastes (scoria and slags) have been used locally as aggregates to build walls. They consist of high-temperature phases (SiO2 polymorphs: cristobalite and tridymite, dendritic spinel, glass) and illustrate an early example of the reuse of waste materials, nowadays termed as 'circular economy'.
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Key words
aggregate,antimony,circular economy,slags
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