I have a questions I haven’t found answered anywhere, but maybe someone here can help out.
First, some background:
I have bought this silica gel with indicator a while ago and have used it in my AMS and also for storing my filament in ziplock bags.
I now want to dry some of the silica gel, and have looked at the various options there are. I want to rule out the use of my kitchen appliances, as I am not fully convinced of the silica with indicator being really fully non-hazardous. I also recently bought a Creality Space Pi dryer, which I would like to use for drying my silica as well. Of course I would need to print a container for that, and since I only have PLA and PETG available at the moment, I wouldn’t be able to drive the dryer too hot.
Online you can find many different opinions about the ideal drying temperature for silica gel, ranging from 60°C to 145°C.
Efficient energy usage is no big concern for me with this, as my PV modules produce a lot of excess power during the current season.
Question:
What temperature should I dry the silica gel at, and does a longer drying time at lower temperature equal the same results as a quicker drying at higher temperature?
Or does higher temperature actually remove more humidity overall, which a lower temperature can maybe not achieve regardless of time?
If you’re melting crockery in your microwave, I assure you whatever it is you’re using is not ceramic. Even the earthenware stuff that cheap coffee mugs are made out of has to be heated to upwards of 1000° C just as part of its hardening process, never mind melting.
You can absolutely get silica gel beads hot enough in a microwave to melt and deform plastic containers, though, including those faux stoneware textured ones. Beware if what you have is not actually Pyrex or ceramic.
I cook the shit out of my silica gel beads in the microwave in an old ceramic pie dish I have no other use for. There isn’t a mark on it. Although I will say, you probably want to microwave your beads gently anyway because at high power levels the moisture flash boils out of them fast enough to cause them to split and shatter, or occasionally leap out of the dish like popcorn.