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Paul sent us this question:I have read that the world is running out of river sand for building, and that desert sand is no good because the grains are spherical because of constantly being blown around. When folk play billiards, they use a triangle to hold the balls. Can something along those lines be designed (maybe some sort of sponge structure) which would hold the sand in place? Alternatively with all the heat in deserts during the day, concentrate it with mirrors so you have furnaces which can fuse the grains together, perhaps with some binder. You'd get fulgurites which could be crushed and used in the normal way as river sand.Anyone care to comment?
All building materials should ideally confirm to the relevant EU/international standards, and should be suitable for the application, in mind. It is only through having standards can we guarantee the quality of the finished goods. A lot of desert sand is coarse grained, and is suitable for construction. A lot of trading ships often used sand as ballast? Which companies shipped sand commercially. It is normal for sand to be characterized for physical and chemical properties inline with the relevant standards.In the UK we currently have EU standards, which are probably similar to the older British Standards, but possibly not available electronically.
Where I live they use (araia do mar) sand from the sea and wash it to reduce the salt content. It is not as clean as river sand, but it works with few problems, if washed properly. I do however notice in some older houses or those worked on by dodgy builders they have used less clean cheaper sand, there is an issue with salt in the walls.