SENI
KECANTIKAN & KESEHATAN
KERAJINAN
BUDAYA & SEJARAH
HIBURAN
LINGKUNGAN
MAKANAN & MINUMAN
MASA DEPAN HIJAU
REKAYASA BALIK
ILMU PENGETAHUAN
OLAHRAGA
TEKNOLOGI
PERANGKAT PAKAI
Extracting Boron Compounds from Borax — The Desert Mineral That Cleans, Fluxes, and Strengthens Glass
Konten berbahaya
Peter

Created by

Peter

13. Mei 2026SE
3
0
0
5
0

Extracting Boron Compounds from Borax — The Desert Mineral That Cleans, Fluxes, and Strengthens Glass

Boron is element 5 — a metalloid sitting between carbon and aluminum on the periodic table, and one of the most versatile elements in materials science. It never occurs as a free element in nature but is found concentrated in evaporite deposits as borax (sodium tetraborate decahydrate, Na₂B₄O₇·10H₂O), also known by its mineral name tincal. The great borax deposits of the world formed when boron-rich volcanic hot springs evaporated in enclosed desert basins — Death Valley, the Tethyan evaporites of Turkey, and the salt flats of the Andes.

Borax has been traded for over a thousand years. Tibetan borax reached Europe via the Silk Road, where it was prized by goldsmiths as the finest flux for brazing and soldering — borax dissolves metal oxides at high temperature, allowing molten metals to flow and bond cleanly. Venetian glassmakers added borax to produce glass with lower thermal expansion (the ancestor of modern Pyrex). Today, boron compounds are essential in fiberglass, borosilicate glass, agricultural micronutrients (boron is essential for plant cell wall formation), nuclear reactor control rods (boron absorbs neutrons), and high-performance ceramics.

This blueprint covers the purification and thermal processing of natural borax to produce three key boron compounds: purified borax crystals (Na₂B₄O₇·10H₂O), calcined borax (Na₂B₄O₇, the anhydrous form used as flux), and boric acid (H₃BO₃, a mild antiseptic and insecticide). The processes are straightforward wet chemistry — dissolution, filtration, crystallization, and thermal decomposition — requiring no exotic equipment.

HAZARD: Borax and boric acid are low-toxicity compounds but are harmful if ingested in quantity and can cause eye irritation. Boric acid dust should not be inhaled. Calcination at 350+ °C requires standard heat-safety precautions. Wear safety goggles and gloves when handling concentrated solutions and hot materials.

Menengah
6-8 hours

Konten berbahaya

Blueprint ini mengandung prosedur berbahaya. Masuk dan aktifkan konten berbahaya di pengaturan akun Anda untuk melihat petunjuk langkah demi langkah.

CC0 Public Domain

Cetak biru ini dirilis di bawah CC0. Anda bebas untuk menyalin, memodifikasi, mendistribusikan, dan menggunakan karya ini untuk tujuan apa pun, termasuk komersial, tanpa meminta izin.

Dukung Maker dengan membeli produk melalui Cetak Biru mereka di mana mereka mendapatkan Maker Commission yang ditetapkan oleh Penjual, atau buat iterasi baru dari Cetak Biru ini dan masukkan sebagai koneksi di milik Anda sendiri.

Discussion

(0)

Log in untuk bergabung dengan diskusi

Loading comments...