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Description: White Burning High Flux Kaolin
Oxide | Analysis | Formula | |
---|---|---|---|
CaO | 0.02% | - | |
K2O | 1.79% | 0.05 | |
MgO | 0.28% | 0.02 | |
Na2O | 0.05% | - | |
TiO2 | 0.06% | - | |
Al2O3 | 37.38% | 1.00 | |
SiO2 | 47.44% | 2.15 | |
Fe2O3 | 0.82% | 0.01 | |
LOI | 12.16% | n/a | |
Oxide Weight | 239.69 | ||
Formula Weight | 272.87 |
There are a great many kaolins available from the UK. These are generally less plastic and fire to greater maturity than American counterparts (because they often contain significant K2O, MgO, etc). They are known for being cleaner and burning to a more blue-white color (whereas American materials more often burn to yellow-white).
Materials |
Standard Porcelain Kaolin
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Materials |
Super Standard Porcelain
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Materials |
NSC Kaolin
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Materials |
Remblend Kaolin
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Materials |
Treviscoe Kaolin
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Materials |
Kaolin
The purest of all clays in nature. Kaolins are used in porcelains and stonewares to impart whiteness, in glazes to supply Al2O3 and to suspend slurries. |
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. |
Typecodes |
Kaolin
Pure clay mineral, there are many brand names of varying purity and iron content. |
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