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Alternate Names: Fire Clay
'Fireclay' is a generic term that in the simplest terms refers to a refractory clay (one which can be fired to a high temperature without deforming or melting). Typically fireclays are plastic and have significant iron impurities. Light duty fireclays have a PCE of about 27 and super duty materials can melt as as high as cone 32.
The obvious use for fireclays is to make bricks and shapes for the structural elements in kilns and furnaces. These clay can be mixed with other materials to introduce air space in increase the insulating value of the product.
Fireclays are useful in many types of ceramics including brick, certain types of tile and sculpture and pottery clays. They impart plasticity and particle size distribution to the body and counter the early melting of any low temperature clays in the mix. For vitreous fireclay based bodies, considerable feldspar content is necessary.
Hundreds of different kinds of fireclays are available. However they are not normally interchangeable in body recipes since they vary drastically in plasticity, particle size, fired color, thermal expansion, and mineralogy.
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This is a Lincoln 60 fireclay drying disk (that has been fired to cone 10R). It has near zero-porosity and is dense and very strong. It is like a stoneware clay, quite vitreous.
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Fired from cone 8-11 and 10 reduction (bottom to top). A refractory material.
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Fired to cone 10R (top) and 7,8,9,10 oxidation (from bottom to top). A refractory material.
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These are Fire-Red, a red refractory low plasticity clay mined in Manitoba, Canada. Red fireclay are not common. The top bar on each set is fired to cone 10R, the iron imparts deep color but the matrix is still fairly pours. The next one down in each set is fired to cone 10 oxidation. The third one down is cone 8, the red color is holding (it shifts to brown between around cone 9).
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Cone 10 reduction (top), cone 10 down to 6 oxidation below that (top to bottom). A refractory material.
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Cone 6 to 10 oxidation (top to bottom) fired shrinkage and porosity testing bars.
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This is a Hawthorne Fireclay sample from 1997, these test bars are made to measure fired shrinkage and porosity. Top bar: Cone 10R. Proceeding down from there is cone 11, 10, 8, etc (oxidation). Drying shrinkage is 4.5%. Firing shrinkage is about 8% at cone 11 going down to 7% at cone 6, it is thus very stable across a wide range. Porosity is likewise, 3% at cone 11 slowly rising to 5% by cone 6. So this material is already fairly vitreous by cone 6 yet still stable at cone 11.
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Plainsman FireRed fireclay fired to cone 10R. This shows the effect of reduction where the body is exposed to the kiln atmosphere (very dark burning) and where it is not (inner foot ring).
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While a PCE test is certainly desirable, few people or companies have the ability to do this test. But the more accessable SHAB test produces physical testing data that is perhaps even better. The last column of numbers (titled "ABS", for absorption) prove that the clay on the right, my code number L4380, is very refractory. Even at cone 10R it has 11.3% absorption, and its firing shrinkage is only 3.9%. How do I know cone 10 11.3% porosity is impressive for a fireclay? Because I have tested many other fireclays using this same procedure. What about the clay on the left, L4378? In comparison, its cone 10R porosity of 6.4%, making it quite a bit more vitreous. But not enough to qualify it as a stoneware (which would have 1-2% absorption and 6-7% firing shrinkage). Additionally, many common fireclays also exhibit same level of maturity as L4378. So is it a fireclay or a stoneware? A 10% feldspar addition would convert it to stoneware, so there is merit in calling it a "stoneware material". But that is "in comparison to" the very refractory L4380. But, if we were compare L4378 to any of the false fireclays commonly sold, then it could certainly be termed a fireclay.
Oxide | Analysis | Formula |
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Materials |
Plainsman Red Fireclay
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Materials |
Chamotte
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Materials |
Cedar Heights Fireclay
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Materials |
Plainsman Fireclay
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Materials |
Christy Plastic Fireclay
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Materials |
Clayburn Fireclay
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Materials |
Denver Fireclay
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Materials |
FM Fireclay
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Materials |
Greenstripe Clay
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Materials |
Grefco Fireclay
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Materials |
Hawthorne Bond
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Materials |
Idaho 1 Fireclay
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Materials |
Idaho 2 Fireclay
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Materials |
Imco 400 Fireclay
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Materials |
Imco 800 Fireclay
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Materials |
IXL FLINTOFT
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Materials |
Jordan Fireclay
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Materials |
Kaiser Denver Fireclay
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Materials |
Kaiser Missouri Fireclay
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Materials |
Lincoln 60 Fireclay
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Materials |
M-4 Fireclay
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Materials |
APG Missouri Fireclay
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Materials |
Monmouth Fireclay
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Materials |
Narco Fireclay
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Materials |
PBX Fireclay
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Materials |
Pine Lake Fireclay
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Materials |
Red Mesa Fireclay
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Materials |
Skagit X Fireclay
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Materials |
T19
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Materials |
NAT Dry Milled Fireclay
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Materials |
Ceramic Fireclay
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Materials |
Industrial Fireclay
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Materials |
Fireclay A/S
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Materials |
Whitfield 202 Fireclay
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Materials |
Hallam Fireclay
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Typecodes |
Fireclay
Fireclays are non-kaolin non-ball clay materials similar to stoneware clays but lacking fluxing oxides. Many fireclays have a PCE of 28 or more. |
Typecodes |
Fireclay
Fireclays are non-kaolin non-ball clay materials similar to stoneware clays but lacking fluxing oxides. Many fireclays have a PCE of 28 or more. |
Typecodes |
Generic Material
Generic materials are those with no brand name. Normally they are theoretical, the chemistry portrays what a specimen would be if it had no contamination. Generic materials are helpful in educational situations where students need to study material theory (later they graduate to dealing with real world materials). They are also helpful where the chemistry of an actual material is not known. Often the accuracy of calculations is sufficient using generic materials. |
Glossary |
PCE
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Glossary |
Fireclay
A clay that withstands fire. In the ceramics industry, clays that are resistant to deforming and melting at high temperatures are called fireclays. Kiln bricks are often made from fireclay. |
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