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  • Pure lime, or quicklime, is calcium oxide. Its ease of manufacture and chemical properties make it an important industrial chemical.

    Lime has a long history dating from the earliest of times. Its main uses were as an ingredient in mortar and as a soil fertiliser.

    Lime manufacture

    From the earliest of times, lime has been made by heating limestone to high temperatures. Production methods have evolved from heating limestone in open fires, to the use of brick lime kilns at the start of the 17th century, to today’s horizontal rotating kilns several metres in diameter and up to 100 metres in length. These modern kilns operate at a temperature of about 1100-1200°C, allowing rapid conversion of limestone into lime.

    CaCO3(s) limestone → CaO(s) lime + CO2(g) carbon dioxide

    Lime’s chemical properties

    Lime (calcium oxide) is a white solid with strongly basic properties.

    Lime reacts readily with water to produce slaked lime, which is the chemical compound calcium hydroxide. A considerable amount of heat energy is released during this reaction.

    Calcium hydroxide is sparingly soluble in water producing an alkaline solution known as limewater. When carbon dioxide gas is passed through or over limewater, it turns milky due to the formation of calcium carbonate.

    CaO(s)
    lime

    +

    H2O(l)
    water

    Ca(OH)2(s)
    slaked lime

    Ca(OH)2(s)
    slaked lime

    +

    H2O(l)
    water

    Ca(OH)2(aq)
    limewater

    Ca(OH)2(aq)
    limewater

    +

    CO2(g)
    carbon dioxide

    CaCO3(s)
    calcium carbonate

    +

    H2O(l)
    water

    Lime reacts with acidic gases like sulfur dioxide.

    CaO(s)
    lime

    +

    SO2(g)
    sulfur dioxide

    CaSO3(s)
    calcium sulfite

    Coal and gas-fired power stations produce large volumes of gaseous product, some of which is sulfur dioxide. Lime and slaked lime are both used to reduce these sulfur emissions.

    Slaked lime reacts with chlorine gas to produce the bleaching agent calcium hypochlorite – a common form of ‘swimming pool’ chlorine.

    2Ca(OH)2(s)
    slaked lime

    +

    2Cl2(g)
    chlorine gas

    Ca(ClO)2(s)
    calcium hypochlorite

    +

    CaCl2(s)
    calcium chloride

    +

    2H2O(l)
    water

    When heated with coke, a form of carbon, calcium oxide combines to form calcium carbide. When calcium carbide is mixed with water, a gas called acetylene is produced. This is the fuel of the oxy-acetylene gas torch used in the metals industries to cut and weld.

    2CaO(s)
    lime

    +

    5C(s)
    coke

    2CaC2(s)
    calcium carbide

    +

    CO2(g)
    carbon dioxide

    CaC2(s)
    calcium carbide

    +

    2H2O(l)
    water

    Ca(OH)2(s)
    calcium hydroxide

    +

    C2H2(g)
    acetylene

    Lime mortar

    Mortar is a workable paste used to bind construction bricks and blocks together. Lime mortar is made by mixing lime, sand and water. It is one of the oldest types of mortar dating back to ancient times. Nowadays, mortar is made by mixing cement powder, sand and water.

    The setting of lime mortar into a hard, binding material involves reaction with atmospheric carbon dioxide to produce calcium carbonate crystals that lock the sand grains tightly together.

    Ca(OH)2(s)
    slaked lime

    +

    CO2(g)
    carbon dioxide

    CaCO3(s)
    calcium carbonate solid

    Fresco is a painting technique that involves applying pigment to a fresh surface of lime mortar.

    This technique was extensively used by Renaissance painters in 15th and 16th centuries – some of the works created such as Michelangelo’s painting of the Sistine Chapel ceiling are marvelled at by a continuous stream of visitors to the Vatican each year.

    Lime – an interesting physical property

    If a marble-sized piece of lime is heated to a high temperature, it emits a very bright white light. In the 1820s, British Army officer Thomas Drummond used this property of lime to develop a light that could be used in lighthouses and on the battlefield. Called Drummond lights, they eventually replaced the gas lights used in music halls and theatres. Performers and actors were now ‘in the limelight’ when on stage.

    Rare-earth metal oxides (cerium and thorium oxides) also show this property.

      Published 9 October 2012 Referencing Hub articles
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