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Glass vs. Crystalline

In ceramics, understanding the difference between what a glass and crystal are provides the basis for understanding the physical presence of glazes and clay bodies.

Key phrases linking here: glass vs. crystalline, crystalline - Learn more

Details

In ceramic technology the term 'glass' is contrasted with the crystalline state, it is seen as a "super-cooled liquid". When crystalline materials solidify the molecules have opportunity to orient themselves in the preferred pattern during freezing whereas in a glass the random orientation of molecules is frozen into the solid. The most familiar glass in ceramic is of course glazes. However all non-refractory bodies also contain glass as a product of the melting of feldspar particles (and other minerals) between the grains of refractory particles (like quartz, alumina minerals). This micro-glass cements the mass of non-melted particles together and imparts more and more density to the matrix as it is fired higher.

In ceramics, glass is the preferred structure and it naturally forms because cooling cycles are rapid. In nature, cooling cycles are slow and rock crystallizes by virtue of the long periods of time it has to cool. This crystallization has produced much of the tremendous range of natural minerals we find in nature.

"Ceramics for the Potter - University of Toronto Press" 1952 called it "silica and two or more bases, which are combined under heat to form a molten solution. On cooling, the solution becomes so viscous that the molecules cannot move about freely enough to form crystals before the state of rigidity is reached. If glass were allowed to cool slowly, it would be as crystallized and as opaque as granite - it is the fast cooling, with the viscosity, that makes glass transparent. Glass is, in short, a solid solution."
In 1945 the American Society for Testing Materials suggested the following definition if glass: "Glass is an inorganic product of fusion which has cooled to a rigid condition without crystallizing."

In 1962 the British Standards Institution adopted the same phraseology. Later more complex methods of producing this state led to revisions such as: "Glass is a non-crystalline solid" and....."glass is an x-ray amorphous material which exhibits the glass transition.."

Related Information

Which one contains more SiO2?


These cone 04 glazes both have 50% Gerstley Borate. The other 50% in the one on the left is PV Clay, a very low melting plastic feldspar. On the right, the other 50% is silica and kaolin, both very refractory materials. Yet the glaze on the right is melting far better. How is that possible? Likely because the silica and kaolin are supplying Al2O3 and SiO2, exactly the oxides that Gerstley Borate needs to form a good glass.

Crystalline and vitreous silica molecular structure


Several things are needed for high silica glazes to crystallize as they cool. First a sufficiently fluid melt in which molecules can be mobile enough to assume their preferred connections. Second, cooling slowly enough to give them time to do this. Third, the slow cooling needs to occur at the temperature at which this best happens. Silica is highly crystallizable, melts of pure silica must be cooled very quickly to prevent crystallization. But Al2O3, and other oxides, disrupt the silicate hexagonal structure, making the glaze more resistant to crystallization.

Links

URLs http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass
Glass on Wikipedia
URLs http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal
Crystal on Wikipedia
Glossary Crystallization
Ceramic glazes form crystals on cooling if the chemistry is right and the rate of cool is slow enough to permit molecular movement to the preferred orientation.
Glossary Crystalline glazes
A type of ceramic glaze made by potters. Giant multicolored crystals grown on a super gloss low alumina glaze by controlling multiple holds and soaks during cooling
Glossary Mineralogy
Raw ceramic materials are minerals or mixtures of minerals. By taking the characteristics of these into account technicians can rationalize the application of glaze chemistry.
Glossary Ceramic Glaze
Ceramic glazes are glasses that have been adjusted to work on and with the clay body they are applied to.
Glossary Ceramic
Ceramic materials are among the hardest and most heat resistant materials known. Ceramics spans the spectrum from ancient terra cotta to modern hi-tech materials.
Glossary Amorphous
Glossary Decomposition
In ceramic manufacture, knowing about the how and when materials decompose during firing is important in production troubleshooting and optimization
Materials Volcanic Ash
Powdered volcanic ash is used to make ceramic glazes, some varieties have a chemistry similar enough to glaze that high percentages can be employed.
Projects Minerals
Properties Glaze Crystallization
By Tony Hansen
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