3.1. Elemental Composition
The elemental compositions of the raw CaCO
3 materials (hen and duck eggshell powders) and their reacted products (CaSO
4·
nH
2O) were measured by the XRF technique, and the results are listed in
Table 1. The major elemental component of both hen and duck eggshell powders is CaO, and we recorded contents of 97.0 and 97.4 wt%, respectively. These confirmed the chemical presentation of CaCO
3 [
23]. However, other compounds (mainly in oxide forms, as shown in
Table 1) were also observed with total contents of 3.01 and 2.53 wt% for the hen and duck CaCO
3 samples, respectively. These experimental values are in agreement with the results reported in the literature. Hossain et al. [
23] used the wavelength-dispersive XRF technique to evaluate the elemental composition of eggshells, and the results showed that CaO was the major component (97.0%). They also observed MgO (~1.08%), P
2O
5 (~0.457%), and Na
2O (~0.17%) as minor compounds. CuO is not present in hen eggshells but is present in duck eggshells, which may be due to hens’ and ducks’ different diets (with different mineral contents) in animal husbandry.
The CaSO
4·
nH
2O products synthesized from hen and duck eggshell powders were composed of two major elemental components: CaO (39.7 wt%) and sulfur trioxide (SO
3, 58.8 and 59.40 wt%). Other minor compounds in oxide forms were also observed, with total contents of 1.54 and 0.928 wt% for HES-CaSO
4·
nH
2O and DES-CaSO
4·
nH
2O, respectively. As listed in
Table 1, the raw CaCO
3 materials (HES and DES) powdered from hen and duck eggshells were found to have an insignificant difference in their CaO (97.00 and 97.40 wt%) contents. These raw CaCO
3 materials with the same content of CaO (39.70 wt%), after being reacted with the SO
42− source (H
2SO
4), were observed in both the HES-CaSO
4·
nH
2O and DES-CaSO
4·
nH
2O products. Although both products showed the same content of CaO, a slight difference in the SO
3 content (0.6 wt%) was observed, which might have arisen from Ca
2+ sources that initially contained different SO
3 contents (0.644 and 1.08 wt% for hen and duck eggshells, respectively). The lowest content of minor components (0.928 wt%) indicated the highest purity of the DES-CaSO
4·
nH
2O product. Hence, it could be inferred that the preparation of CaSO
4·
nH
2O by using duck eggshell waste as a renewable source provided the highest purity of the product. In addition, toxic metals, i.e., lead, arsenic, cadmium, and chromium, were not found in the hen and duck eggshell wastes (HES and DES), highlighting their green characteristics for use as eco-friendly and low-cost renewable sources for the production of value-added products like hydrated calcium sulfate (CaSO
4·
nH
2O).
3.2. Reaction Times and Product Yields
The “reaction time” was considered the time taken to dissolve eggshell CaCO
3 powders in H
2SO
4 solution completely, then generate a calcium sulfate (Ca
2+-SO
42−) salt solution, as demonstrated in Equation (1).
Table 2 illustrates the reaction time recorded during the generation of salt solution.
As described in
Section 2.1, to achieve the complete chemical reaction, the molar ratio required between eggshell CaCO
3 powder and H
2SO
4 solution was 1:1, forming Ca
2+-SO
42−-H
2O solution. We observed that the temperature of the reaction increased, demonstrating that the dissolution process is an exothermic reaction. As can be seen in
Table 2, there was an insignificant difference between the reaction times observed for the hen and duck eggshell systems; however, the results indicated that duck eggshell waste should be selected as the Ca
2+ source used to rapidly prepare Ca
2+-SO
42− solution in a large-scale system.
As shown in Equations (1) and (2), the yields (
Yp/%) of CaSO
4·
nH
2O products prepared from eggshell CaCO
3 raw materials were computed by using Equation (3) [
29]:
where
wtocs and
wttcs (g) are the weights of CaSO
4·
nH
2O observed and in theory, respectively.
Table 2 lists the yields of CaSO
4·
nH
2O products synthesized from the two different eggshell wastes and 50%
w/
w H
2SO
4. The yields of the prepared CaSO
4·
nH
2O products derived from hen and duck eggshells are 84.73 and 87.74%, respectively. The product yields reported in this work are higher than that reported in a previous work (<80%) [
29]. These results highlight that to achieve the highest CaSO
4·
nH
2O yield on a plant scale with a short reaction time, duck eggshell waste should be selected as the starting material for the CaSO
4·
nH
2O preparation. The reaction times of the gypsum products synthesized from the two kinds of eggshell wastes in this work are shorter than those reported in previous research (24 h) [
23,
24].
3.3. Vibrational Spectroscopy
The vibrational characteristics of the functional groups of the samples were observed and identified using an FTIR spectrometer, and the spectra of CaCO
3 and CaSO
4·
nH
2O in the MIR range (4000−400 cm
−1) are demonstrated in
Figure 1 and
Figure 2, respectively. The functional group associated with the eggshell CaCO
3 samples is the carbonate (CO
32−) anion, whereas sulfate (SO
42−) and water (H
2O) are the functional groups of the CaSO
4·
nH
2O products. Therefore, the vibrational characteristics of the samples were characterized and mainly assigned based on the asymmetric stretching, symmetric stretching, and bending vibrational modes of CO
32−, SO
42−, and H
2O.
CaCO
3 can crystallize in three anhydrous polymorphs, e.g., calcite, aragonite, and vaterite, [
35]; however, calcite is the most stable form under ambient conditions (room temperature and 1 atm) [
36], while aragonite is slightly observed [
37] and vaterite is formed under high specific conditions [
38]. The FTIR spectroscopic technique was previously applied in the literature to quantify the vibrational modes of calcite and aragonite CaCO
3 polymorphs [
37]. Therefore, the spectroscopic technique was selected in this work to identify the crystal structure (polymorph) of CaCO
3 milled from hen and duck eggshells, and the infrared spectra of CaCO
3 samples are demonstrated in
Figure 1. The vibrational bands were considered based on the vibrational positions of trigonal planar CO
32−, which consists of four absorption modes: asymmetric (
υ3) and symmetric (
υ1) stretching modes between C and O atoms, and out-of-plane (
υ2) and in-plane (
υ4) bending modes between C and two O atoms. Another two vibrational characteristic combinations—between
υ1 and
υ3, and between
υ1 and
υ4—were also previously reported [
37].
Calcite and aragonite CaCO
3 polymorphs show slightly different absorption positions overall, but various absorption positions between calcite and aragonite overlap [
36,
37]. Previously, three absorption positions of 670, 1021, and 1094 cm
−1 of hen eggshell CaCO
3 powder or 668, 1019, and 1093 cm
−1 of duck eggshell CaCO
3 powder were assigned as the vibrational characteristics of an aragonite CaCO
3 polymorph [
36,
37], whereas, in this study, other absorption positions were assigned as the vibrational characteristics of calcite CaCO
3. This revealed that both eggshell waste powders mainly contained the calcite CaCO
3 polymorph, with a very small aragonite CaCO
3 amount. The vibrational characteristics of the milled CaCO
3 samples are listed in
Table 3.
Figure 2 shows the infrared spectra of the CaSO
4·
nH
2O products derived from hen and duck eggshell CaCO
3 raw materials. The vibrational modes (asymmetric stretching, symmetric stretching, and bending) of SO
42− and H
2O were mainly considered and assigned.
Takahashi et al. [
39] carried out factor group analysis of gypsum (CaSO
4·2H
2O) and reported that the symmetric stretching vibration (
υ1 (A
1, single mode, one component)) of the SO
42− ions belongs to the
Au symmetric species. The bending vibration (
υ2 (E, doubly degenerate mode, two components)) also belongs to
Au symmetry. Both the asymmetric stretching (
υ3 (F
2, triply degenerate mode, three components)) and bending (
υ4 (F2, triply degenerate mode, three components)) vibrations belong to two symmetric species:
Au (one component) and
Bu (two components). This previously obtained information was used for the assignment of the vibrational characteristics of the synthesized CaSO
4·2H
2O. All observed vibrations of CaSO
4·
nH
2O products derived from hen and duck eggshell CaCO
3 powders, as listed in
Table 4, were interpreted. Two vibrational positions at 510 and 456 cm
−1 were assigned as the
υ2 mode of SO
42− [
39]. In addition, these two bands were also assigned as the vibrational modes (rocking, wagging, and twisting) of H
2O [
40]. Three vibrational positions at 674, 612, and 594 cm
−1 were assigned as the
υ4 mode of SO
42−. This observation is in agreement with the vibrational characteristics of CaSO
4·2H
2O reported by Kayabaş and Yildirim [
41]. The peak at 674 cm
−1 is prominent, whereas the two peaks at 612 and 594 cm
−1 are weaker. This phenomenon is in agreement with the results reported by Takahashi et al. [
39]. The intensities of these three peaks exhibit remarkable polarization dependence, indicating that the direction of the transition moment of the 674 cm
−1 peak is parallel, while the transition moments of the 612 and 594 cm
−1 peaks are perpendicular to the
c-axis. Three modes—
υ1 (symmetric O−H stretching),
υ2 (H−O−H bending), and
υ3 (asymmetric O−H stretching)—of H
2O in CaSO
4·2H
2O crystals are in the
Au and
Bu symmetry species. A peak at 3412 cm
−1 is assigned as both the asymmetric (
υ3) and symmetric (
υ1) O−H stretching modes (belonging to
Bu symmetry) of H
2O, whereas a peak at 1642 cm
−1 is assigned as the H−O−H bending (
υ2) mode of H
2O. All these observed vibrational bands are in agreement with results reported by Salvadori et al. [
42] and Hossain et al. [
23], which confirm the presence of SO
42− and H
2O. Other vibrational modes and their positions of SO
42− and H
2O, as well as CO
2 (adsorbed gas on the surface of the sample), are listed in
Table 4.
3.4. Crystallographic Characteristics
As described in the vibrational spectroscopic results, calcite and aragonite polymorphic crystals of CaCO
3 were observed. Therefore, another powerful technique, XRD, was used for the characterization of different CaCO
3 polymorphs [
36,
37]. The diffraction patterns (relationships between the XRD intensity and 2
θ angle) of hen and duck eggshell waste powders are demonstrated in
Figure 3a.
Similar diffraction patterns between hen and duck eggshell waste powders were observed (
Figure 3a), indicating that both materials (hen and duck eggshell powders) had the same crystallographic characteristics. All diffraction peaks were consistent with the standard diffraction data, PDF-ICDD #47-1743 [
43], revealing that only the calcite CaCO
3 polymorph was observed, which is the natural polymorph of CaCO
3 present in the eggshell [
44]. No diffraction peak of the aragonite CaCO
3 polymorph was observed. This result might have been since there was a very small amount of aragonite CaCO
3, which was not observed in the XRD technique [
44]. Smooth diffraction baselines with high diffraction intensity peaks, as exhibited in
Figure 3a, indicated the high crystallinity of CaCO
3 powders obtained from both hen and duck eggshells.
Figure 3b shows the crystal structure of CaCO
3 in the calcite polymorph [
15]. The lattice parameters
a and
c of calcite CaCO
3 are 4.9896 and 17.0610 Å, with a cell volume of 367.8537 Å
3 [
37]. The crystallite sizes (
Sc) of the samples were calculated by using the main diffraction (
hkl lattice plane: 104; 2
θ angles: 29.40° and 29.41° for hen and duck eggshell CaCO
3 samples) through the Scherrer equation (Equation (4)) [
45].
where
λ is the X-ray wavelength (1.5406 Å),
β is the full width at half-maximum (FWHM) value of the selected XRD diffraction peak, and
θ is the angle of the selected diffraction peak.
The calculated crystallite sizes for the (104) calcite-lattice plane are listed in
Table 5 for hen and duck eggshell waste CaCO
3 powders, respectively.
Other crystallographic data (observed 2
θ positions, diffraction intensities, the standard
d-spacing values, and
hkl lattice planes [
46]) of hen and duck eggshell CaCO
3 powders are listed in
Table 6. These obtained data—specifically the higher intensities of all diffraction peaks, except for the (116) lattice plane—indicated that good crystallinity was obtained for the duck eggshell CaCO
3 sample.
The diffraction patterns of the products obtained from the calcination process of raw hen and duck eggshell waste powders, as demonstrated in
Figure 4a, showed three crystalline phases, consisting of CaO (lime), calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)
2, portlandite), and calcite CaCO
3. Diffraction peaks at 32.47°, 37.62°, and 54.10° (
Figure 4a) were assigned to the (111), (200), and (220) lattice planes of CaO based on PDF-ICDD #74-1226 [
47], and
Figure 4b shows the crystal structure of CaO [
48]. Conventionally, a small fraction of CaO material can adsorb atmospheric H
2O, resulting in the formation of Ca(OH)
2 crystals due to the exposure of CaO to the air. The presence of Ca(OH)
2 was confirmed by PDF-ICDD #01-1079 with 2
θ results of 18.26, 34.23, and 47.37° for the (001), (101), and (102) lattice planes of Ca(OH)
2 [
49]. A diffraction peak at 29.66° (for both hen-and duck CaCO
3) was observed, which is the highest diffraction intensity of calcite CaCO
3, corresponding to the (104) lattice plane [
37]. The crystallite sizes of CaO samples calculated from the Scherrer equation are listed in
Table 5.
The experimental diffraction pattern and the crystal structure [
50] of the synthesized CaSO
4·
nH
2O product are demonstrated in
Figure 5a,b, respectively. All diffraction peaks (
Figure 5a) observed for the synthesized products were consistent with the standard diffraction of PDF-ICDD #33-0311, demonstrating the diffraction characteristics of gypsum (CaSO
4·2H
2O) [
23,
51].
Given the similarity of the diffraction patterns of the hen and duck CaSO
4·2H
2O products, we surmised that both prepared products had the same structural and chemical characteristics, which were those of gypsum (CaSO
4·2H
2O). The characteristic peaks of other phases were not observed in the diffraction patterns, indicating that CaSO
4·2H
2O might be formed as a single phase or that other phases with small amounts were not observed by the XRD technique. The observed 2
θ positions, diffraction intensities, standard
d-spacing values, and
hkl lattice planes of hen- and duck-eggshell-derived CaSO
4·2H
2O samples are listed in
Table 7.
The crystallite sizes calculated by using Scherrer’s equation for the hen and duck CaSO
4·2H
2O samples are listed in
Table 5. Pinto et al. [
52] synthesized pure CaSO
4·2H
2O by using CaCl
2 and Na
2SO
4 as the Ca
2+ and SO
42− sources, respectively. The lattice parameters of CaSO
4·2H
2O were then calculated and found to comprise
a,
b, and
c values of 5.675, 15.214, and 6.284 Å, respectively. CaSO
4·2H
2O crystallizes in a monoclinic crystal system with the space group
C2/
c (#15) [
23]. The relative intensity (
Ri), an important parameter, was also calculated in this work from the experimental XRD data. The
Ri for the highest diffraction intensity ((020) plane) was calculated from the other three strong lattice planes—(021), (040), and (041)—using Equation (5) [
23]:
where
Int(020),
Int(021),
Int(040), and
Int(041) are the intensities of the diffraction peaks of the (020), (021), (040), and (041) lattice planes, respectively.
The
Ri values of the hen and duck CaSO
4·2H
2O samples were 1.23 and 1.25, respectively. In order to compare the
Ri values, the
Ri of the diffraction database (PDF-ICDD #33-0311) was also calculated for the same lattice planes and found to be 0.52. The preferential growth (
Pg) parameter of the (020) plane was then calculated using Equation (6) [
23]:
where
Riss and
Risd are the relative intensities of the synthesized sample (CaSO
4·2H
2O) and the standard data (PDF-ICDD #33-0311,
Ri = 0.52), respectively.
The
Pg values for the synthesized hen and duck CaSO
4·2H
2O samples were calculated and found to be 4.54 and 4.62, respectively. The positive values we obtained suggested that the growth along the (020) lattice plane was stable and favorable, indicating good crystal stability [
23].
Figure 6a demonstrates the diffraction patterns of products obtained from the calcination step (900 °C, 2 h) of CaSO
4·2H
2O. All diffraction peaks show the structural characteristics of the anhydrite (CaSO
4) phase. As described in the
Section 1, two polymorphs of CaSO
4 were reported,
β-CaSO
4 and
γ-CaSO
4, which are the stable and metastable forms, respectively [
16]. The hydration rate of the
γ polymorph (CaSO
4(s) +
nH
2O(g)
→ CaSO
4·
nH
2O(s)) is greater than that of the
β polymorph; consequently, if the
γ form comes in contact with atmospheric water, its rehydration process will occur, preventing the formation of the
γ form [
53].
All diffraction peaks of both CaSO
4 samples, obtained from hen- and duck-eggshell-derived CaSO
4·2H
2O, were consistent with PDF-ICDD #72-0916. This standard diffraction confirmed that the product of the calcination process of CaSO
4·2H
2O is the orthorhombic CaSO
4 phase with
β polymorphic crystals. The crystal structure of
β-CaSO
4 [
54] is shown in
Figure 6b. The crystallite sizes of
β-CaSO
4 samples calculated from the Scherrer equation are listed in
Table 5.
3.5. Morphological Characteristics
The morphological characteristics of hen and duck eggshell CaCO
3 raw materials and their reaction products (CaSO
4·2H
2O) were imaged with a magnification of 15 k
x, and the resulting micrographs of the samples are presented in
Figure 7. The micrographs of the CaCO
3 particles obtained from the milling process of raw hen and duck eggshell powders present an agglomeration of CaCO
3 particles, causing different particle sizes. These different particle sizes were obtained since milling is a mechanical process, commonly employed for material size reduction through centrifugal forces [
55]. During the milling process, some fractions of eggshells were milled completely, resulting in small powdered particles, whereas other fractions were not milled completely, resulting in large powdered particles. In addition, during the rotation process, small particles were randomly moved and located on the surface of large particles.
The micrographs of the CaSO
4·2H
2O samples synthesized from the reaction between hen or duck eggshell CaCO
3 raw material and H
2SO
4, as demonstrated in
Figure 7, show plate-like particles. This finding is not consistent with the results reported in the literature. Mbogoro et al. [
56] used commercial CaCl
2·2H
2O and Na
2SO
4 as Ca
2+ and SO
42− sources, respectively, to form CaSO
4·2H
2O crystals. The same concentration of Ca
2+ and SO
42− salts of 0.56 mol/L was prepared as stock solutions and then those were employed to prepare growth solutions with five different Ca
2+:SO
42− free-ion ratios of 2.5:18.8, 3.4:13.7, 6.9:6.8, 13.6:3.4, and 17.8:2.5, corresponding to the ionic ratios (
r) of 0.13, 0.25, 1.01, 4.00, and 7.12, respectively. At low ionic ratios (
r < 1, SO
42−-rich solutions), plate-like CaSO
4·2H
2O crystals were observed, whereas needle-like crystals were observed at an equal stoichiometry (
r = 1) and at high ionic ratios (
r < 1, Ca
2+-rich solutions) [
56]. Moreover, Madeja et al. [
57] also used commercial CaCl
2·2H
2O and Na
2SO
4 solutions to prepare CaSO
4·2H
2O using titration precipitation and then investigated the influences of various additives (small molecules, homo- and co-polymers) on the morphological characteristics of CaSO
4·2H
2O. Among the additives, a co-polymer of vinylpyrrolidone (PVP) and acrylic acid (PAA) acted as an important modifier for gypsum development. CaSO
4·2H
2O particles with tilted stacking edges and pseudo-hexagonal plates were obtained [
57]. In this work, irregular plate-like CaSO
4·2H
2O particles were observed by using an ionic ratio between Ca
2+ (hen or duck eggshell CaCO
3) and SO
42− (H
2SO
4) of 1 (as described in “
Materials and their Synthesis”, Equations (1) and (2)) without an additive addition step. These results demonstrate that different formation conditions cause different morphological characteristics [
56,
57].