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3D Print a Test of the Beer Bottle Neck
3D Printing a Clay Cookie Cutter-Stamper
A 3-minute Mug with Plainsman Polar Ice
A Broken Glaze Meets Insight-Live and a Magic Material
Accessing Recipes from "Mid-Fire Glazes" book in Insight-Live
Adjusting the Thixotropy of an Engobe for Pottery
Analysing a Crazing, Cutlery-marking Glaze Using Insight-Live
Compare the Chemistry of Recipes Using Insight-Live
Connecting an External Image to Insight-Live Pictures
Convert a Cone 10 Glaze to Cone 6 Using Desktop Insight
Create a Synthetic Feldspar in Insight-Live
Creating a Cone 6 Oil-Spot Overglaze Effect
Creating Rules for Calcium Carbonate - Wollastonite Substitution
Design a Triangular Pottery Plate Block Mold in Fusion 360
Desktop Insight - Difficult Formula to Batch Calcuations
Desktop Insight 1A - Compare Theoretical and Real-World Feldspars
Desktop Insight 1B - Turn a Feldspar Into a Glaze
Desktop Insight 1C - Substitute Wollastonite for Whiting in Glazes
Desktop Insight 2 - Creating a Matte Glaze
Desktop Insight 3 - Dealing With Crazing
Desktop Insight 4 - Add a Native Material to MDT, Build a Glaze
Desktop Insight 5A - Glaze Formula to Batch Calculations
Desktop Insight MDT: Adding a Material
Desktop Insight: Maintain an MDT as a CSV File in Excel
Digitalfire Desktop INSIGHT Overview Part 1
Digitalfire Desktop INSIGHT Overview Part 2
Enter a Recipe Into Insight-live
Entering Shrinkage/Porosity Data Into Insight-Live
Getting Frustrated With a 55% Gerstley Borate Glaze
How I Fixed a Settling Glaze Slurry Using Desktop Insight
How I Formulated a Cone 6 Silky Matte Glaze Using Insight-Live
How to Add Materials to the Desktop Insight MDT
How to Apply a White Slip to Terra Cotta Ware
How to Paste a Recipe Into Insight-live
Importing Data into Insight-live
Importing Desktop Insight Recipes to Insight-live
Importing Generic CSV Recipe Data into Insight-Live
Insight-Live Meets a Silica Deprived Glaze Recipe
Insight-Live Quick Overview
Liner Glazing a Stoneware Mug
Make a precision plaster mold for slip casting using Fusion 360 and 3D Printing
Make test bars to measure pottery clay physical properties
Making ceramic glaze flow test balls
Manually program your kiln or suffer glaze defects!
Mica and Feldspar Mine of MGK Minerals
Predicting Glaze Durability by Chemistry in Insight-Live
Preparing Pictures for Insight-live
Remove Gerstley Borate and Improve a Popular Cone 6 Clear Glaze
Replace Lithium Carbonate With Lithium Frit Using Insight-Live
Replacing 10% Gerstley Borate in a clear glaze
Signing Up at Insight-live.com
Signing-In at Insight-live.com
Slip cast a stoneware beer bottle
Subsitute Gerstley Borate in Floating Blue Using Desktop Insight
Substitute Ferro Frit 3134 For Another Frit
Substituting Custer Feldspar for Another in a Cone 10R Glaze Recipe
Substituting Materials by Weight: Why it does not work!
Substituting Nepheline Syenite for Soda Feldspar
Thixotropy and How to Gel a Ceramic Glaze
Use Insight-live to substitute materials in a recipe
Using Recipe Libraries With Desktop Insight

Convert a Cone 10 Glaze to Cone 6 Using Desktop Insight

Learn the chemistry differences between cone 10 and 6 glazes and how to make a glaze melt at a lower temperature without introducing other problems like crazing.

D. Desktop Insight


Click here to watch this at youtube.com or click here to go to our Youtube channel

What is the difference between cone 10 and 6 glazes? How to evaluate frits to choose the best one to source boron to a glaze. How to determine how much frit to add to increase the amount of B2O3 in the formula by a specific amount. How to juggle other materials to restore the rest of the chemistry (caused by the increase in other oxides introduced by the frit). It also demonstrates how to make a melt fluidity tester and how to find out which materials in a recipe are contributing a particular oxide to the formula.

Melting temperature is directly related to chemistry, learn what the chemistry differences are between a typical cone 10 and 6 glaze and how to use INSIGHT to make the conversion

Reducing the Firing Temperature of a Cone 10 Glaze to Cone 6
Welcome. In this lesson we are going reduce the firing temperature of a glaze from cone 10 to 6 and end up with a surprise.
I will research glaze melting at digitalfire.com, talk about the differences between the two glaze types, boron sourcing and limits, watching thermal expansion when adding flux and unlinking a recipe from the recipe database.

Find an article at Digitalfire Reference Library
Tobegin I will choose Digitalfire Reference library from the INSIGHT Help menu.
On this page I will click Articles.
That takes me here, a long list related to ceramic chemistry, mineralogy and physical properties.
Then I will choose 'Find' from the browsers Edit menu (in this case Firefox) and look for the words 'firing temperature'. Notice Ctrl-f is the shortcut to find a word on a web page, this works in Internet Explorer also).

Increasing boron is the key
This article, 'Reducing the Firing Temperature of a Glaze From Cone 10 to 6' says that boron is the magic oxide, increasing its proportion is the best way to move glazes down a few cones. It discusses some of the side effects of adjusting melting temperature that I will not cover here, I will just demonstrate the mechanics of increasing boron since this is the most important.
This one, 'A Low Cost Tester of Melt Fluidity' looks interesting. I will click it.

Glaze melt fluidity tester
This is a very interesting article about a melt fluidity tester you can use to compare two glazes. It also has information about adjusting glaze melting temperature.
Notice this picture. This is a comparison showing the same glaze formula, the one on the left sources MgO and CaO from a frit, the one on the right from talc and calcium carbonate. As you can see melting temperature is more than just the chemistry, frits are a good idea for melting glaze better, no question about it.

Open a target formula for cone 6
To start I am going to open a target formula for cone 6 using this button above the formula list. I will select the Roy-Hesselberth one and click open.

Open 1214M cone 6 recipe in area 1
Here it is.
Then I want to open the 1214M cone 6 recipe that comes with INSIGHT in recipe 1. I will click here and enter enough of the name here to limit the long list of glazes I have stored in INSIGHT. I will click the line and click Open.

Open 1947U cone 10 recipe in area 2
Next, I will select recipe 2 and open the 1947U cone 10 recipe that comes with INSIGHT. I will enter enough of the name here to limit the long list, click the line and click Open.

The main difference: Cone 6 has boron
Now we have a cone 6 formula on the left, a cone 10 on the right and a cone 6 target. Let's look closer.
There is nothing really different about the fluxes, except this cone 10 has a little zinc. But zinc is common in glazes at all temperatures.
The alumina and silica in the cone 10 glaze are higher, but notice in the target that cone 6 glazes can have alumina and silica as high as this cone 10 glaze. Of course, in general, cone 6 glazes have more fluxes, and therefore, less silica and alumina.
The big difference is here, B2O3, or boron.

Why is boron better than other fluxes
Amazingly many people use frits and materials like colemanite and gerstley borate without ever knowing about this magic oxide these materials contribute.
It is a low expansion, low melting glass, that is exactly what we need to reduce the firing temperature of a cone 10 glaze.
Without boron we would have to try and do it with zinc, sodium and lithium, the other fluxing oxides do not melt at cone 6. But these three oxides have so many issues. Sodium is high expansion, zinc conflicts with many colors, lithium can only be used in small amounts or it causes glaze defects. Plus they just do not melt the way boron does.

Comparing a popular frit formula: 3124
But look at this typical frit. It sources so many other oxides besides boron. If we add this to a glaze is it not going to throw the chemistry completely out of whack?
That is why there are so many kinds of frits. Look at the oxides our cone 10 glaze has. The frit does not contribute anything that is not already in the glaze.
If I can use the amount of frit needed to give me a specific amount of boron, I should be able to adjust other materials in my recipe to realign the other oxide amounts.

I will use frit 3134: It has no alumina
But I am going to use Frit 3134 instead, it has fewer oxides (so it is simpler), more boron, and it is the one already in the cone 6 recipe I have opened. It also has no alumina, that will enable me to source Al2O3 from kaolin to suspend the glaze better.
In a minute you are going to see why this frit is so popular.

Increase B2O3, reduce KNaO
I have selected recipe 2, selected the Frit line, then clicked the increment button to increase the amount two-at-a-time until the B2O3 matches the cone 6 recipe.
Now I will match the KNaO numbers. The frit is adding this so I need to reduce the feldspars contribution.

Kill the ZnO
Then next thing I have done is zeroed the amount of zinc in our former cone 10 recipe using this button.

Unlinking the recipe from the database
Before going any further we need to do something. I have clicked the Recipe Details tab.
I am editing the G1947U recipe, it is code number 232 in the database. If I click the Save button I am going to wipe out that recipe and replace it with this.
Then I will choose Duplicate Recipe in the File menu. This will remove the link between this recipe and database record 232. Now when I click the Save button INSIGHT will create a new database record and link this to it and save the recipe there.

Fine tuning the rest of the recipe
Next I will update these blanks, including the date. Mostly I removed information from the 1947U recipe. Then I will click Save.
Now back at the formula, notice the oxides. There are only minor differences between our adjusted cone 10 recipe and the cone 6 one.
I will match up the KNaO by reducing the feldspar, the Al2O3 by increasing the kaolin, the SiO2 by reducing the silica.
Now you know why this frit is popular, it has a balance of oxides similar to most glazes, so adding it to supply boron does not disrupt the chemistry too much.

The new recipe is the same as G1214M!
OK, I have done the adjustments. The cone 6 recipe and our adjusted cone 10 one have the same chemistry.
But check this out. The recipe of the adjusted cone 10 glaze has almost equal parts of the same 5 materials also. Isn't that interesting.
That means that chemically, the standard Digitalfire G1214M cone 6 transparent recipe is just our standard 1947U cone 10 transparent plus 0.2 molar parts of boron and no zinc.
The amazing thing is I did not realize this until composing this lesson.

Noticing cost, thermal expansion
But when I open the original 1947U in area 1 to compare, you would never know this, they look quite different.
So the glaze on the left is the original, the one on the right is our adjustment to make it melt at cone 6.
Notice it raises the thermal expansion, but not by much. The more you adjust glaze chemistry to reduce the melting point the more of a challenge it is to keep expansion, and thus crazing, down. The main reason is the lower silica and alumina. But again, the low expansion boron is the secret to keeping the expansion down.
Notice also that the cost is up, that is expected since frits are more expensive. You can tell INSIGHT the costs of your individual materials using the Overrides/Typecodes dialog.

The End
So, the secret to reducing the firing temperature of a cone 6 glaze is to add boron and leave the rest of the oxide amounts unchanged. There is no way you can do that without ceramic chemistry.
The article that we found at the Digitalfire Reference Library a few minutes ago says that sometimes it is better to identify the color, opacification and variegation mechanisms and then transplant these into a cone 6 base glaze of similar properties to the cone 10 one.

Links

URLs https://digitalfire.com/videos
Tutorial Videos at Digitalfire
Oxides B2O3 - Boric Oxide
Glossary High Temperature Glaze
Glossary Medium Temperature Glaze
These are stoneware glazes that fire in the range of 1200C (2200F). They often contain boron to assist with melting.
Glossary Flux
Fluxes are the reason we can fire clay bodies and glazes in common kilns, they make glazes melt and bodies vitrify at lower temperatures.
Glossary Borate
Borate glazes, those fluxed with the oxide B2O3, are the most common type used in ceramic industry and hobby for low and medium temperatures.
Glossary Boron Frit
Most ceramic glazes contain B2O3 as the main melter. This oxide is supplied by great variety of frits, thousands of which are available around the world.
Glossary Digitalfire Insight
A downloadable program for Windows, Mac, Linux for doing classic ceramic glaze chemistry. It has been used around the world since the early 1980s.
Articles Reducing the Firing Temperature of a Glaze From Cone 10 to 6
Moving a cone 10 high temperature glaze down to cone 5-6 can require major surgery on the recipe or the transplantation of the color and surface mechanisms into a similar cone 6 base glaze.
By Tony Hansen
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