info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Scrambled Eggs or How Eggshells Become Phosphates
Fecha
2019-06Registro en:
Potes Vecini, Diana; Jofré, Shirley C.; Pereyra Ríos, Florencia B.; Sartuqui, Javier; Messina, Paula Verónica; et al.; Scrambled Eggs or How Eggshells Become Phosphates; American Chemical Society; Journal Of Chemical Education; 96; 7; 6-2019; 1443-1448
0021-9584
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Potes Vecini, Diana
Jofré, Shirley C.
Pereyra Ríos, Florencia B.
Sartuqui, Javier
Messina, Paula Verónica
González, Belén
Saugo, Melisa
Meier, Lorena Alejandra
Diaz, Monica Fatima
Ciolino, Andrés Eduardo
Resumen
As part of the training activities planned for the Chemical Engineering degree, in 2016, a group of students from the Chemical Engineering Laboratory course was challenged to face a plausible reuse of discarded eggshells. A straightforward methodology to synthesize phosphates such as calcium pyrophosphate or fluoroapatite among others was developed using commercial phosphoric acid and discarded eggshells as starting materials. Throughout the development of this activity, topics such as recycling and reuse of discarded materials, guided-inquiry instruction, self-learning, and soft-skills development were successfully covered. The strategy proposed in this work encourages students to make connections between science and life and provides an excellent linkage between chemical research and recycling without neglecting those basics required by the official curriculum.