David Stone. Perfect name for someone who invented this!
@DesertJungleMan6 ай бұрын
😂
@loungelizard83611 ай бұрын
fascinating! However, I must ask where do you get steel dust, what is it, and how much of it is there (the crushed glass doesn't seem to be a problem, but if you ran out of that, you might have to use sand).
@vinayagammani215 жыл бұрын
how to make ferrock
@sudipteshsahoo46525 жыл бұрын
How to prepare ferrock
@BigCroca2 жыл бұрын
Sand, iron powder, water
@FicTiOnKiNg175 жыл бұрын
How we check the amount of co2 absorbed in ferrock
@AntiProtonBoy11 ай бұрын
You allow it to cure in an enclosed environment with known amount of CO2 inside, then check how much CO2 has depleted.
@glenbegin91527 ай бұрын
I want to make affordable housing out of this stuff and underground dome homes (Hobbit houses) to stand up to hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes and fires but instead of using metal rebar or mesh for it's reinforcement or frame. I want to use basalt rebar or mesh which is made from volcanic rock and has a melting point at 1450 degrees Celsius or 2642°F. I need to know how hot "Ferrock" gets while it cures / hardens so it won't melt the basalt rebar / mesh when combined ? Also know how to grow organic produce and fruit underground vertically so it doesn't have to be grown in California or Hawaii and doesn't use toxic pesticides and toxic soil (Soil erosion) to grow in and since the food is grown vertically in towers takes up less space than traditional farms do which require lot's of land.. Also know of a clean water source called an "atmospherics water generator"? which produces water from air. There is an electrical energy source i know of too. Called an " Magnetic Transducer Generator" which uses a giant self propelled magnet motor or a "whirlpool micro hydro generator"could be used if the farm or house is built next to a river or stream?
@Term_eD6 жыл бұрын
i want to know the process for school research. Is there any way of finding out??! please help
@guillaumelafleche94776 жыл бұрын
medo khedrawy I started reading a paper about it to figure out how porous or waterproof it is compared to cement, and it describes the process. It is called Pore- and micro-structural characterization of a novel structural binder based on iron carbonation.