WCO Explanatory Notes reproduced for reference. © World Customs Organization. Verify against official WCO publication.
38.02 - Activated carbon; activated natural mineral products; animal black, including spent animal black. 3802.10 3802.90 - Activated carbon - Other (A) ACTIVATED CARBON; ACTIVATED NATURAL MINERAL PRODUCTS Carbon and mineral substances are said to be activated when their superficial structure has been modified by appropriate treatment (with heat, chemicals, etc.) in order to make them suitable for certain purposes, such as decolounsing, gas or moisture adsorption, catalysis, ion-exchange or filtering. These products fall in two groups : characterised by a very large specific surface (of the order of hundreds per gram), and by the presence of van der Waal's bonds or free chemical bonds saturable by organic or inorganic molecules (c %hYS' ermcal cd These products are obtained by chemical or heat treatment of certain vegetable or mineral substances (clay, bauxite, etc.) in the presence of natural impurities or added foreign matter. This treatment causes a change in the structure of the basic substance, accompanied by an increase in the s ecific surface, and, in the case of crystalline substances, distortions in the lattice due to e insertion or substitution of atoms with different valencies. The valencies which thus remain free can cause the condensation of protons or electrons on the surface, rendering the product active as a chemical adsorbent, a catalyst or an ion-exchanger. % (II) Products which generally have a fairly small s ecific surface of the order of 1 to P 100 m2/g). Although they generally have a high e ectrical charge ensity, these products have no marked capacity for adsorption and therefore are not decolourising agents. On the other hand, in aqueous sus ension they establish powerful electrostatic interactions with colloids, facilitabng or inhi iting their coagulation, and are therefore suitable for use as filtering agents. % Products of this type are also enerall obtained by appropriate heat treatment. The resence of alkaline substances fiuring &e calcining process sometimes encourages the formation of surface charges. The heading includes : (a) Activated carbon. This is usually obtained by treating vegetable, mineral or other carbon (wood charcoal, coconut shell carbon, peat, lignite, coal, anthracite, etc.) at a hi temperature in the presence of steam, carbon dioxlde or other gases (gas activation), or calcination of cellulosic materials impregnated with solutions of certain chemica s c emical activation). ;"h Activated cafbon is used as a fine powder for decolourising liquids in many industries (sugar or glucose manufacture, oil or wine industry, medicaments, etc. . In the form of ams, it is used for adsorbing vapours (for example, in recovering volati e solvents during $.-cleaning processes, removing benzene from coal gas), for purifymg water or air, as a protection against toxic ases, in catalysis, or for eliminating the accumulation of gas at the electrodes during electro ysis (depoIansation). ? (b) Other activated natural mineral products such as : (1) Activated diatomite. This consists of kieselguhr or other selected siliceous fossil by means of acids, calcined in contact with sintering earths, decalcified if necess agents such as sodium chlori e or sodium carbonate and then ground and graded by appropriate means. Diatomite calcined without the addition of sintering agents is, however, excluded (heading 25.12). (2) Certain volcanic minerals, such as perlite, which, after ' ding, are subjected to a thermal " shock" in a very hot flame (1000 OC or o v e r c n d then re-ground and graded. Activated perlite is in the form of a very light shiny powder. On microscopic examination it is seen to consist of very thin, transparent flakes having curved surfaces. The two types of products cited at (1) and (2) above are of very low apparent specific gravity and are filter media chiefly used in the preparation of chemical or pharmaceutical roducts (especially antibiotics), in sugar or glucose manufacture, in processing beverages, !or filtering water, etc. (3) Activated clays and activated earths. These consist of selected colloidal clays or clayey earths activated, accordin to their intended use, by means of an acid or an alkali, dried and then ground. &men activated by means of an alkali, they are emulsifiers, suspension agents and agglomerating agents; these are used, in parhcular, in the manufacture of polishing or cleaning reparations, and, because of their swelling sands an drilling sludge. When activated by means properties, for improvmng foun of an acid, they are mainly use for decolourising animal, vegetable or mineral oils, fats or waxes. B (4) Activated bauxite. Bauxite is usually activated by means of alkalis or by suitable thermal treatment. It is chiefly used as a catalyst, a desiccant and a decolourising agent. The heading also excludes : (a) Naturally active mineral roducts (e.g., fuller's earth), which have not undergone any treatment modifying their superficiaf' structure (Chapter 25). (b) Activated chemical products such as activated alumina (headin 28.18), activated silica gel (heading 28.11 or 38.24 , artificial zeolite ion-exchangers (heading 8.42 or, if containing binders, beading 38.24) and sulp onated coal ion-exchangers (heading 38.24). (c) Activated carbons having the character of medicaments (heading 30.03 or 30.04) or put up in packings for retail sale as deodorisers for refrigerators, cars, etc. (heading 33.07). (d) Catalysts consisting of a chemical product (e.g., a metallic oxide) fixed on a support of an active material (e.g., activated carbon or diatomite) (heading 38.15). (e) Expanded perlite in the form of light-weight spheroidal granules (heading 68.06). (B) ANIMAL BLACK, INCLUDING SPENT ANIMAL BLACK This group covers the different varieties of black obtained by carbonishg materials of animal origin, in particular : (1) Bone black obtained by calcining defatted bones in a closed vessel. It is a porous black product containing on1 a low content of pure carbon (about 10 to 20 % of its weight unless treated with aci ,in which case the carbon content is much higher). It is in the form of powder, grains, paste, or ieces having the shape of the bones or pieces of bone used for its preparahon. Bone blac is a decolowlsing agent widely used in many industries, especially the sugar indus , and is also employed as a black pigment, for example, in the manufacture of polishes an certain inks. dY $ Spent bone black is used as a fertiliser and also for the manufacture of black pigments. (2) Blood black obtained by calcining dried blood in a closed vessel. It is generally used as a decolourising agent. (3) Ivory black obtained b calcinin ivory waste. This roduct, usually presented as a very fine, velvety black pow er or smafi, irregularly-shape cones, is used in artists' colours. 7' cf (The term " ivory black " is sometimes used to describe special grades of bone black.) (4) Leather black, horn black, hoof black, tortoise-shell black, etc.
1.- This Chapter does not cover : (a) Separate chemically defined elements or compounds with the exception of the following : (1) Artificial graphite (heading 38.01); (2) Insecticides, rodenticides, fungicides, herbicides, anti-sprouting products and plant-growth regulators, disinfectants and similar products, put up as described in heading 38.08; (3) Products put up as charges for fire-extinguishers or put up in fire-extinguishing grenades (heading 38.13); (4) Certified reference materials specified in Note 2 below; (5) Products specified in Note 3 (a) or 3 (c) below; (b) Mixtures of chemicals with foodstuffs or other substances with nutritive value, of a kind used in the preparation of human foodstuffs (generally heading 21.06); (c) Products of heading 24.04; (d) Slag, ash and residues (including sludges, other than sewage sludge), containing metals, arsenic or their mixtures and meeting the requirements of Note 3 (a) or 3 (b) to Chapter 26 (heading 26.20); (e) Medicaments (heading 30.03 or 30.04); or (f) Spent catalysts of a kind used for the extraction of base metals or for the manufacture of chemical compounds of base metals (heading 26.20), spent catalysts of a kind used principally for the recovery of precious metal (heading 71.12) or catalysts consisting of metals or metal alloys in the form of, for example, finely divided powder or woven gauze (Section XIV or XV). 2.- (A) For the purpose of heading 38.22, the expression “certified reference materials” means reference materials which are accompanied by a certificate which indicates the values of the certified properties, the methods used to determine these values and the degree of certainty associated with each value and which are suitable for analytical, calibrating or referencing purposes. (B) With the exception of the products of Chapter 28 or 29, for the classification of certified reference materials, heading 38.22 shall take precedence over any other heading in the Nomenclature. 3.- Heading 38.24 includes the following goods which are not to be classified in any other heading of the Nomenclature : (a) Cultured crystals (other than optical elements) weighing not less than 2.5 g each, of magnesium oxide or of the halides of the alkali or alkaline-earth metals; (b) Fusel oil; Dippel's oil; (c) Ink removers put up in packings for retail sale; (d) Stencil correctors, other correcting fluids and correction tapes (other than those of heading 96.12), put up in packings for retail sale; and (e) Ceramic firing testers, fusible (for example, Seger cones). 4.- Throughout the Nomenclature, “municipal waste” means waste of a kind collected from households, hotels, restaurants, hospitals, shops, offices, etc., road and pavement sweepings, as well as construction and demolition waste. Municipal waste generally contains a large variety of materials such as plastics, rubber, wood, paper, textiles, glass, metals, food materials, broken furniture and other damaged or discarded articles. The term “municipal waste”, however, does not cover : (a) Individual materials or articles segregated from the waste, for example wastes of plastics, rubber, wood, paper, textiles, glass or metals, electrical and electronic waste and scrap (including spent batteries) which fall in their appropriate headings of the Nomenclature; (b) Industrial waste;