Monthly Tech-Tip | No tracking! No ads! |
Frit Softening Point | 670-685C |
---|
An acidic metallic oxide which produces yellow coloration in amounts to 10%. Its color in generally weak, but can be strengthened when fritted with tin and zirconia. Although yellows can be prepared with antimony, vanadium is stable at higher temperatures.
The most vibrant color is obtained in leaded glazes.
Also a strong flux.
Another form, Vanadium Trioxide (V2O3) also exists and is alkaline in nature.
All common traditional ceramic base glazes are made from only a dozen elements (plus oxygen). Materials decompose when glazes melt, sourcing these elements in oxide form. The kiln builds the glaze from these, it does not care what material sources what oxide (assuming, of course, that all materials do melt or dissolve completely into the melt to release those oxides). Each of these oxides contributes specific properties to the glass. So, you can look at a formula and make a good prediction of the properties of the fired glaze. And know what specific oxide to increase or decrease to move a property in a given direction (e.g. melting behavior, hardness, durability, thermal expansion, color, gloss, crystallization). And know about how they interact (affecting each other). This is powerful. And it is simpler than looking at glazes as recipes of hundreds of different materials (each sources multiple oxides so adjusting it affects multiple properties).
Materials |
Vanadium Pentoxide
|
---|---|
Materials |
Stain
|
Glaze Color | A classic yellow colorant. |
---|
By Tony Hansen Follow me on |
Buy me a coffee and we can talk