Hi all.
This is my first thread/post on this forum - hope I don't break the rules...
I'd like to know if clay is always clay, or if only some are good for aquaria. For instance, can I use broken and grinded flower pots in a substrate? Will it be beneficial?
Thanks in advance.
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First forgive please editing and typos, I find it very hard to write in small spaces.
I just happen to have a background in ceramics and was instructed long ago (while in NYC) with one of the best professor's ever (Susan Peterson) master's level of expertise in ceramics chemistry. I was a "lab assistant" and made the various clay bodies and glazes. (But forgive in advance as my books are long stored)
But first, just as in one's land garden, clay soils can be a HUGE problem so to would it be in the aquarium, unless one uses additives. (due to the nature of the molecules there is little room for oxygen or anything else). Yet there some plants, land and aquatic that do well in such soils with added bodies.
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This site is excellent as a resource (often burried in searches) and this includes the substrate bodies for aquariums (differing depending on the plants).
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/PlantedTksSubWebIndex/soilags.htm
On the Use of Soil In Aquarium Gardening
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Unless you want to be advanced in your knowledge in your aquarium substrate and "mix" your own which may include clay bodies, my suggestion would be to find the proper Pre Made soils for the plants you desire and go from there.
Pond keepers often use clay bodies (and other types of "soil") for plants in the pond. It is always a mix of this or that by degrees based on the need of each plant type.
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Top 12 Plants That Grow Well In Clay Soil
Posted by Farhan Ahsan on August 30, 2014 in Flowers |
http://theselfsufficientliving.com/top-12-plants-grow-clay-soil/
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Clay is basically one of many forms of soil. These come about as the river systems starting at mountain tops collect minerals and grind them down and they are deposited (over much time) along the river route. The further away from the source the more minerals are added and the composition. It's actually very complicated.
Porcelain for example - usually white due to Kaolin "clay" or certain minerals is white as it is derived near the top of these river deposits without the added minerals that would alter the colors with the minerals (eroded rocks in river beds) further down. This is why when the project is thin (as in a pot) it is almost glass-like and transparent. Its name has nothing to do with the type of clay but the fact that with less minerals it can be fired at much higher temperatures in the Porcelain range. Industrial clay bodies are another matter (very high temps).
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Porcelain is a ceramic material made by heating materials, generally including kaolin, in a kiln to temperatures between 1,200 and 1,400 ̊C (2,200 and 2,600 ̊F). The toughness, strength, and translucence of porcelain, relative to other types of pottery, arises mainly from vitrification and the formation of the mineral mullite within the body at these high temperatures.
These natural clay bodies were abundant in China and it was unique. The Chinese did not allow this "secret" out (ie selling the clay body) and many "faux" bodies were created to try to replicate it's unique and rare characteristic - but they never came close. Visit any major museum with these amazing Ceramics and one can see their uniqueness.
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https://www.hunker.com/12003887/different-types-of-clay-soil
Once the clay (soil body with added minerals depending on what one wants for the end result) is "fired" (and each "clay body" has a different firing range) then the composition of the molecules in the original wet clay (which changes as it dries) is set!
So NO pottery - terra cotta so named for it's much lower firing range, (and red due to minerals added and if fired higher would "melt" into a puddle) can not "reconstitute" back to it's original form (unbreak those molecules that are now "fixed" due to being heated at high temperature).
You can use it as a substrate if you want oxygen underneath but gravel will work better or as a filler. Like those who use broken plates (made from clay) or pottery as fillers at the bottom of land plants to create a drain for the container with finer and finer gravel added upwards.
Unless you have a really large aquarium, this would MHO be overkill.