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Expired Lime

The only thing that could happen to it anyhow is that it could absorb water and become Ca(OH)2 if it was CaO to begin with, or absorb CO2 and become less potent. Also not a problem.
 
Marc,

It's true, but CaO, or Ca(OH)2 are not naturally occuring to my knowledge. The calcium carbonate (the mined stuff) I think needs to 'cooked' to....ah...here's a reference on how it's made:

http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/c/calciumo.asp

"It is prepared by heating calcium carbonate (e.g., limestone ) in a special lime kiln to about 500°C to 600°C, decomposing it into the oxide and carbon dioxide. "
 
AFAIK, the only thing that can "go bad" with this stuff is if it recombines with co2 to make calcium carbonate again. For exact recipes, or uses where any precipitate would ruin the batch, that could be a bad thing. For our purposes, we usually add more than enough to saturate anyway, so a little lost potency, and/or precipitate in the bucket isn't likely to mean much.
 
Marc,

Yes, I didn't know it was the food type material, couldn't tell from the question. Even if it was not, I don't think expiration date on this product has much meaning at all. Quite frankly, that's true for a great many chemicals if you understand what they are, and their potential for breakdown or not.
 
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