GB2309223A - Prefired material for whiteware ceramic composition - Google Patents

Prefired material for whiteware ceramic composition Download PDF

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GB2309223A
GB2309223A GB9707321A GB9707321A GB2309223A GB 2309223 A GB2309223 A GB 2309223A GB 9707321 A GB9707321 A GB 9707321A GB 9707321 A GB9707321 A GB 9707321A GB 2309223 A GB2309223 A GB 2309223A
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prefired
material according
clay
quartz
whiteware
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GB2309223A8 (en
GB2309223B (en
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Peter Francis Messer
Ahmet Capoglu
Majid Jafari
Ahmad Fauzi Mohd Noor
Henry Ehibhanre Okojie
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BTG International Ltd
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British Technology Group Ltd
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Priority claimed from GB939319152A external-priority patent/GB9319152D0/en
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C04CEMENTS; CONCRETE; ARTIFICIAL STONE; CERAMICS; REFRACTORIES
    • C04BLIME, MAGNESIA; SLAG; CEMENTS; COMPOSITIONS THEREOF, e.g. MORTARS, CONCRETE OR LIKE BUILDING MATERIALS; ARTIFICIAL STONE; CERAMICS; REFRACTORIES; TREATMENT OF NATURAL STONE
    • C04B33/00Clay-wares
    • C04B33/24Manufacture of porcelain or white ware

Description

MILLED FIRED MATERIAL USABLE IN WHITEWARE CERAMICS This is a Divisional of Patent Application 9418257.3 (Published Application GB 2281908A), which claims a whiteware ceramic composition comprising filler, flux of median size below 6 microns, 5-20% raw clay, and a prefired ceramic matrial milled separately from the other components.
The present invention relates to a milled fired material. Such a material may be used as the prefired ceramic material referred to in GB 2281 908 A, for use in whiteware ceramic compositions, especially those which may be amenable to pressing, slip casting or injection moulding. Such whiteware compositions comprise glasses and many of the same crystalline phases as conventional whiteware compositions, although the proportions of the phases, the compositions of the glassy phases or other aspects will differ. Such whitewares include electrical porcelain, sanitaryware and tableware, including bone china and hotelware, but exclude e.g. steatites, aluminas and whitewares used for wall tiles.One whiteware made possible by the invention, a fine translucent whiteware based on anorthite, has no conventional equivalent, being composed mainly of anorthite, a major crystalline component of bone china, glass and small amounts of other crystalline phases such as mullite and possibly some composed of calcia-magnesia-silica. It contains reduced (preferably no) p-tricalcium phosphate, the other major crystalline component of bone china, and so has a much lower coefficient of thermal expansion and an improved thermal shock resistance.
Conventional compositions ("body mixtures") apart from bone china comprise roughly: 1 part by weight of a filler, such as 10 llm quartz, cristobalite, or a mixture of alumina and quartz; 1 part of flux, such as 10 pm feldspar or nepheline syenite; and 2 parts of fines, such as china clay and/or ball clay, which are both mainly kaolinitic platey particles at least an order of magnitude smaller than the filler. (Sizes throughout the specification are median sizes, are somewhat approximate, and are taken as equivalent spherical diameter (e.s.d.) as measured by laser diffraction. Amounts throughout are by weight.) The raw clay content of conventional whitewares of the types listed above, ranges from about 25% to greater than about 60%.In some compositions, small quantities of coarsely ground prefired clay ("chamotte") or coarsely ground whiteware body ("pitchers") are added to reduce shrinkage. These are often termed grogs. The e.s.d. of this component may be up to 1 mm. A bone china composition might comprise 50% by weight of 5 llm calcined bone (hydrated calcium phosphate), 20% of 10 um Cornish stone flux and 30% micron-to-submicron china clay. These compositions give rise to a reject rate which ought to be taken seriously, many of the faults such as a centre pip or mould lines being attributable to unwanted alignment of the platey clay particles.
However, the clays are present for good reason. They confer plasticity for forming, binding properties giving strength in the unfired state (green strength) and a high specific surface area to drive densification during firing. China clays and ball clays are indeed usually mixed to obtain the required properties. Ball clay particles are much finer; consequently increasing the ball clay content in the mixture improves the plasticity and increases both the green strength and driving force for densification. However, impurities such as iron and titanium which cause unwanted colouration in the fired product are higher in ball clay than in china clay. Occasionally, halloysite is employed as the clay, because it combines a low impurity content with a very fine particle size. Halloysite particles are tubular in shape.
Returning to consider the other components, flux produces a viscous liquid when its alkali oxides interact mainly with the clay and to some extent with siliceous fillers during firing. (Quartz and cristobalite fillers tend to dissolve in liquid flux). Densification occurs through a liquid-phase sintering process, in which viscous flow is the dominant mechanism.
Filler, so called even though it is not usually inert, acts as an antidistortion component by reducing the plasticity of the body in the unfired, wet state and during firing.
Quartz and cristobalite when used as fillers also play an important role in increasing the thermal contraction of whitewares on cooling after firing, so that glazes are put into compression and crazing is avoided.
The flux and filler particles are coarser than those of the clays. This allows the body mixture to pack efficiently and so keep the firing shrinkage low. In commercial practice, quartz and the fluxes have median particle sizes which are about 10 llm.
As the particles of the china and ball clays are platey, they become aligned during plastic forming, slip casting and spray drying. This alignment causes plastically-formed and slipcast wares to shrink anisotropically during firing with resultant unwanted changes in their shapes and the development of stresses. Distortion caused by anisotropic shrinkage results in production losses and reduced product quality. These shrinkage stresses can be relieved at firing temperature by the formation of fissures, which may become the flaws from which fracture is initiated in service. The alignment of clay particles in spray dried granules leads to the formation of enlarged pores during firing powder-pressed wares.
Enlarged pores form at the centres of most compacted granules and these reduce the fracture toughness of the wares.
At the firing temperature, mainly as a result of the clay-flux interaction, large proportions of all whiteware bodies become viscous silicate liquids. As a consequence, wares can deform and distort under their own weights, as well as from stresses arising because of anisotropic shrinkage as discussed in the previous paragraph. Such distortions during firing are commonly called pyroplastic deformation. Fine translucent china, bone china and alumina-containing wares are especially prone to this pyroplastic deformation, which leads to high production losses. Plates, bowls and saucers of fine and bone chinas have to be fired in refractory supports to retain their shapes. Other items also require to be supported throughout firing for shape retention. Thus, the firing stage is inefficient, as so much space in the kiln is occupied by the supports.Pyroplastic deformation prevents the use of a single firing process to obtain glazed wares.
The large contractions of quartz and cristobalite grains on cooling from the firing temperature, arising from a combination of thermal contractions and reductions in volume associated with their ss - a phase changes, are an advantage in preventing crazing of glazes but can cause the grains to become detached from the surrounding matrices. Some grains that do not become detached on cooling may do so when the material is subsequently loaded mechanically. The probability that a grain will become detached on cooling or loading increases as its size increases. With the size distribution for quartz employed commercially, a significant proportion of the quartz grains break away on cooling.
Detached grains cannot transmit mechanical loads and hence their presence reduces the fracture toughness.
It would therefore be desirable to formulate whitewares such as electrical porcelains, sanitarywares, vitrified hotelwares, alumina-containing whitewares, fine translucent chinas, hard porcelains and bone chinas in a way that gives rise to significantly less anisotropic shrinkage and pyroplastic deformation, with consequently fewer rejects, and such that whitewares with higher toughnesses and strengths are obtained. Ideally, the formulation should allow translucent fine china and bone china tableware and other wares to be given their heat treatments without being supported. Thus, their glazes could be fired on at higher temperatures than used conventionally, with consequent improvement in glaze durability and hardness and avoiding the need to use lead-containing glaze.For whitewares that are translucent, where whiteness is at a premium, e.g. bone china, fine china, anorthite-based whiteware and hard porcelain, the total clay content in the formulation, which to a large extent determines the iron oxide (=colour) content, should be reduced to improve whiteness, its part in effect being taken by reactive or hydrated alumina and quartz.
It may also be desirable to make whitewares containing no bone or other form of calcium triphosphate.
According to the present invention, a milled fired material comprises as ingredients from 3843% (by weight) chemically refined aluminium trihydroxide (or the equivalent in other chemically refined hydrated or reactive alumina), 34-39% silica, 17-22% calcium carbonate (or the equivalent in calcium oxide/hydroxide), up to 5% bone ash or magnesium carbonate (or the equivalent in magnesium oxide/hydroxide) and 0-2% zinc oxide (or the equivalent in zinc hydroxide/carbonate), in which material, when fired, anorthite and mullite are present.
This material may be for use in a whiteware ceramic composition, for example one comprising filler and flux and the said fired material milled separately from the other components, wherein the raw clay content of the whiteware ceramic composition is from 5 to 20% by weight.
The prefired materials should be made from starting materials which contain low levels of the oxides that cause unwanted colour, viz. titanium and more especially iron.
A final whiteware with the required whiteness may then be made using a higher proportion of ball clay in its clay content than would normally be recommended from the 'whiteness' point of view, if the iron oxide content of the prefired material is kept at as low a level as economically possible. Ball clays, it will be recalled, contain significantly higher amounts of iron and titanium oxides than do china clays, but their use confers greater plasticity on the whitewares during forming and higher strength in the unfired state. The iron oxide content of the prefired material should therefore preferably be lower than about 0.1% by weight Fe203 and more preferably lower than 0.05%.
The main starting materials usually comprise: calcium carbonate in the form of either chalk, limestone, crushed marble with 0.1% Fe203 or less or chemically-refined calcium carbonate (alternatively: calcium hydroxide) with about 0.02% Fe203; silica in the form of a fine quartz sand with about 0.02% Fe203; and either aluminium trihydroxide, aluminium monohydroxide or a reactive alumina with 0.01% Fe203 or less.
The use of chemically-refined materials as sources for calcia and alumina together with a good quality glass-making quartz sand results in very white prefired materials with low iron oxide contents at an affordable price.
A composition having the main starting materials in the proportions to form only anorthite densifies poorly. With excess silica present, high densities and translucency can be obtained. However, such compositions do not result in sufficiently deformationresistant materials. To achieve this objective, mullite crystals (3A1203.2SiO2) are developed in the prefired mixture. These crystals are found embedded in the densified prefired mixtures and they are randomly orientated and positioned. The mullite crystals, which are in the form of elongated needles, are postulated to impede relative movement of the anorthite grains at high temperature when the prefired material is stressed.
Minor amounts of other constituents are usually required to effect the densification of the deformation resistant compositions. Two such constituents that have been shown to be effective are bone ash and magnesium carbonate, in preferred quantities of at least 2 or 3%, or at least 1 or 2%, respectively. Magnesium carbonate is a source of akermanite (2CaO.MgO.2SiO2) during calcination. Anorthite forms a eutectic with diopside at 1274"C and with akermanite at 1234 C. Hence, at a calcination temperature of 1350"C or higher, liquid-phase sintering can occur. The use of magnesium carbonate (or hydroxide or oxide) has been found to produce the most deformation-resistant prefired materials.As only a small amount of magnesium carbonate is used, a relatively costly chemically-refined material can reasonably be employed. An upper limit on the calcium employed (e.g. equivalent to 21 wt% calcium carbonate) may usefully further encourage mullite formation.
Small additions of ZnO, e.g. at least 1/2% up to 1%, have proved beneficial in compositions that develop mullite in promoting the elongation of mullite needles which (we postulate) improves deformation resistance; ZnO also slightly whitens discoloured prefired materials.
Optionally, the chemically refined aluminium compound is calcined to drive off water prior to being mixed with the other ingredients.
The components should be milled before firing to under 5 Fm median size, preferably under 3 pm, e.g. quartz to 2.4 pm (conventional size 10-11 um) and alumina to 2-3 pm.
The batch of constituents for any of the listed whitewares can have a broad particle size range, with coarser material being present than is sometimes used conventionally.
Thus, the whiteware composition may contain constituents whose median particle size is less than 1 micron, those whose median particle size is from 1 to 6, 1 to 12 or 1 to 20 microns and those whose median particle size exceeds 6-10, 12 or 20 microns, respectively.
The batch may have a high packing efficiency, e.g. it may be such as to have a shrinkage on firing of 10% (linear) or less.
When the milled fired material according to the invention is used in a whiteware composition, the prefired milled material preferably makes up 30-90% of the composition, milled for example to a median particle size of from 10 to 50, e.g. 10 to 20 or 30 um (especially where the composition also comprises cristobalite) or from 15 to 30 or 40 microns (especially where the composition also comprises quartz) or, for bone china, anorthite-based whiteware and hard porcelain especially, from 10 to 20 microns e.g. 10 to 15 microns, thus constituting a coarse size fraction, preferably excluding particles exceeding 80 pm (more preferably excluding those exceeding 60 llm most preferably excluding those exceeding 50 Fm) achieved e.g. by sieving and preferably substantially equiaxed and preferably having a porosity not exceeding 7%, preferably not exceeding 5%.
The composition may further comprise the same or a different prefired material milled to a median particle size of one-fifth to one-tenth that of the prefired milled material mentioned in the previous sentence, e.g. 1 to 20 microns. The or each prefired material should be appropriate to the type of whiteware of which it forms a part, for example, a translucent prefired material to make a translucent whiteware. To reduce the tendency of whitewares to deform under their own weights upon firing, the prefired material(s) should be formulated so that they are stiff at the firing temperature of the whitewares, e.g. by the or each prefired material having a lower flux content than the overall average value for the whiteware of which it is a constituent.Thus, preferably, the prefired material even if other than of solely clay is more deformation-resistant at the firing temperature of the composition than the composition as a whole. Whilst in a final body aluminium cannot be present as Al(OH)3 or other hydrated alumina, because the evolved water would cause pores and fissures, this consideration does not apply with such force (i.e. A1(OH)3 may be used) in making prefired material according to the invention, which is to be milled anyway.
It may be used with silica (e.g. quartz) for maximum whiteness. Thus, the invention envisages the use of a combination of aluminium trihydroxide (300/t) or other hydrated or reactive alumina plus silica (e.g. quartz 1 80/t) as a (synthetic) replacement for clay (400/t) to reduce the iron oxide content, especially in the prefired body. In addition to the whiteware compositions containing a substantial proportion of prefired material according to the invention, they contain lower raw clay contents than usual, and these features act together to reduce distortion of the whiteware caused by firing. The proportion of prefired material may in some cases be 30 to 65%, or in other cases 60 to 90%, and 30-65% may be of one size cut. A size cut is all those particles none of which exceeds five times the size of any other such particle.Where the prefired material is translucent, 55-65% of the composition may be of one size cut of the prefired material. Otherwise 30-50% of the composition may be of prefired material, if made from solely clay (up to 65% if made from clay with filler).
The filler and flux particles in conventionally formulated whitewares (at - 10 llm) are the coarser components, the reverse of the preferred situation according to the invention, wherein prefired materials (at 10-50 clam) are the coarser components.
Consequently, the filler and flux sizes can be optimised for the particular body mixture, and packing efficiency can then be ensured by appropriate sizing of the prefired materials.
Thus according to the invention, relatively fine fluxes and fillers can be used without increasing the firing shrinkages. The use of substantially finer fluxes than conventional (e.g. median particle size below 6 or even 2 microns) is highly preferred because it results in lower residual porosities in the fired whitewares. When quartz or cristobalite are used as the fillers, it has now been found that the finer particle sizes (e.g. from 8 microns downwards to 1 micron) lead to less of these fillers becoming detached from the matrices after cooling from the firing temperatures, than if larger particles had been used.Both the lower porosities from the fmer fluxes and increased tendency for the quartz and cristobalite grains to remain bonded lead to increased toughnesses and strengths which is always useful but of especial relevance to opaque products (i.e. not so much to the more translucent tablewares). The reduction in the anisotropy of the firing shrinkages from the use of lower raw clay contents leads to lower porosities in wares made by powder-pressing spray-dried granulates, which leads to increased toughnesses and strengths. The tendency of the wares to form fissures that can act as fracture-initiating flaws, to relieve stresses caused by anisotropic firing shrinkage, is also reduced when lower raw clay contents are used.
Consequently, the use of finer fluxes, finer quartz and cristobalite, when present, and reduced clay contents all act together to increase toughness and strength values. Quartz and cristobalite filler particles should however not be so small as to dissolve completely in the viscous liquid, and this imposes a lower particle size limit of preferably 1 pm more preferably 3 clam.
The use of a broader particle size range, i.e. coarse, medium and fine particles, allows a smaller proportion of fine material to be incorporated for a given packing efficiency. The fine particles, i.e. particles less than 1 um (actual ESD), similar to the conventional, depending on the type of whiteware, may include ball clay, halloysite and proportions of each of china clay, the fluxes and fillers. The fines may also include a (preferably large) proportion of any particulate mineralisers (auxiliary fluxes) when these are added to aid densification and the fines may further include reactive aluminas of very low iron content, added to some batches to effect a reduction of the raw clay content (hence also iron content) used in the final body.
Turning to the coarse particles, the prefired material, at 10-50 urn being generally coarser than the conventional except where ultra-coarse grogs are used, is preferably made from clay calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) or other suitable calcium-containing compound (e.g. calcium hydroxide) + magnesium carbonate or other suitable magnesium-containing compound (e.g. magnesium hydroxide) + aluminium trihydroxide or other hydrated or reactive alumina + silica (e.g. quartz) and optionally clay; or bone ash or other suitable compound containing phosphorus (e.g. tricalcium phosphate Ca(PO4)3) + aluminium trihydroxide or other hydrated or reactive alumina + silica (e.g. quartz) + calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) or other suitable calcium-containing compound (e.g. calcium hydroxide) + optionally flux (e.g. nepheline syenite) + optionally clay.The beneficiation of the micaceous waste may be magnetic, thus removing (magnetic) biotite (which contains iron and is therefore coloured), leaving a higher proportion of relatively colourless muscovite. The incorporation of quartz or alternative material as the filler (e.g. alumina, cristobalite or a mixture thereof) into the prefired material yields a higher proportion of crystalline phase in the overall body than when clay is used as the prefired component and helps to minimise the glass content, making the material tougher.
The most suitable prefired materials for the coarse components for the translucent whitewares, i.e. fine translucent chinas, hard porcelains, anorthite porcelains and bone chinas, are all different. The most suitable prefired material for fine translucent china i.e. whiteware containing quartz is translucent and is made mainly of quartz + feldspar (preferably a potash feldspar to avoid cristobalite formation) + some clay and/or aluminium trihydroxide or a reactive alumina or mixtures of any of these, where the clay component has a low iron oxide content and the aluminium trihydroxide and reactive alumina have very low iron oxide contents. The total Fe203 from all sources should be kept below 0.2 wt%. Titanium is also considered an equally undesirable source of colour, and ball clay typically contains 1% of each. A suitable composition is thus 85% prefired material, 7'A% ball clay and 71/2% china clay.
The most suitable prefired material for hard porcelain is made from the same constituents as used for fine translucent quartz-containing whiteware but the preferred proportions of the constituents are different, so that the resulting fired material has a lower thermal expansion coefficient than that of fired material destined for fine translucent china; the preferred proportions for porcelain are such as to avoid residual quartz.
The prefired material for anorthite-based whiteware is used as the coarse and medium-sized components. These materials may also be used in the bone china formulation. The most suitable prefired material for anorthite-based whiteware should have a very low iron oxide content as whiteness is at a premium. This can be achieved as indicated earlier by using a combination of aluminium trihydroxide or other hydrated alumina or reactive alumina having a very low iron oxide content plus silica (e.g. quartz) of low iron oxide content as a replacement for clay. That is, preferably no clay or only a small proportion of clay should be used to make the prefired material.The calcium to form anorthite (CaO.A1203.2SiO2) with the previously mentioned constituents can be calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) or other suitable calcium-containing compound of low iron oxide content (e.g. calcium hydroxide). The prefired material may be sintered with a liquid phase which comes from the reaction between anorthite and calcia-magnesia-silica compounds (e.g. diopside). The magnesia for the reaction can be provided by magnesium carbonate or other suitable magnesium-containing compound (e.g. magnesium hydroxide) having a low iron oxide content. Alternatively the prefired material may be sintered with a liquid phase derived from the reaction of bone ash with excess silica over that required to form anorthite.
The most suitable coarse prefired material for translucent bone china should, like all its other constituents, have a low iron oxide content as whiteness is at a premium. For such a prefired material, the phosphate required to form p-tricalcium phosphate crystals can be provided in the traditional way by using calcined and milled bone or synthesised hydroxyapatite or by adding chemically-derived calcium phosphate, phosphoric acid or phosphorus pentoxide. The other components are the flux + clay or aluminium trihydroxide or reactive alumina or a mixture of any of these + finely-milled silica (e.g. quartz) and calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) as required to bring about the formation of anorthite in preference to phases such as a-alumina and mullite.The clay should be a high quality china clay or halloysite or a mixture of these and the aluminium trihydroxide and reactive alumina may be from the Bayer process.
The coarsest coarse prefired material would be used when quartz and/or a-alumina is present as filler in the final whiteware. The quartz particles when present should be significantly smaller than the prefired particles to achieve efficient space filling, while being neither so small as to dissolve completely in the viscous liquid, nor so large as to detach themselves from the surrounding material as they contract upon cooling. The median sizes of the coarsely-milled prefired materials are chosen so that particle packing of the final unfired whitewares is as efficient as possible taking into account the sizes of the other constituents.Whitewares made with alumina as the filler would have a minimum median size for the prefired material, chosen on the basis of particle packing, in the range 20 to 25 um. For bone china, anorthite-based whiteware and hard porcelain as already mentioned, the minimum median size could be finer and be in the range 10 to 15 mm. The use of finer median sizes than needed for the most efficient packing, simply increases firing shrinkage. The amount of shrinkage that occurs during firing is however not as critical for compositions according to the invention because the shrinkage is more nearly isotropic.
The raw clay (fines) is preferably in the size range 5 to 10 times smaller (linear) than the filler, and may comprise china clay (typical particle size 2.0 um x 0.2 clam) or ball clay (0.2 um x 0.02 clam) or halloysite. The fines will usually be mainly a single clay or a mixture of clays, but should include the bulk of such mineraliser as is present if used in particulate form. The clay minerals that can be used depend on the properties required of the final fired whiteware, but can be any clay or clay mixture that is sufficiently pure to yield a ware of acceptable colour.
The filler is preferably in the size range of 5 to 10 times smaller (linear) than the prefired material, e.g. 5 clam, and preferably the filler and flux taken together have a median size in the range of 5 to 10 times larger (linear) than the raw clay. The flux is preferably of median particle size below 6 Clam, preferably below 3 clam, for example of size 1 V2 um or of median size 21/2 um, preferably smaller than the filler.
The filler (whether for making the prefired material or as used in the final body) may comprise one or more of quartz, cristobalite, alumina (e.g. a-alumina), wollastonite or bone. Where alumina replaces part or all of the quartz in the filler, the composition becomes suitable for chip-resistant hotelware and high-strength electrical porcelain. In addition, further prefired material in an amount of up to 35%, e.g. 20-25% may be present in a size fraction more typical of the filler, e.g. 0.2-0.1 times the size of the previously mentioned coarse prefired material thus e.g. 2-3 um and optionally of a different composition. These sizes of filler and flux particles are smaller than normal. Quartz particles should not be too small (otherwise, as already mentioned, the quartz might completely dissolve in the viscous melt).Flux particles should not be too large; among their other advantages, mentioned elsewhere, fine flux particles help to ensure low porosity of the product in that the fine particles give rise to correspondingly fine shrinkage holes which are small enough to sinter out, increasing the density.
Pyroplastic deformation is reduced by incorporating as much deformation-resistant prefired material as possible consistent with being able to density the final whiteware and obtaining a final product of sufficient strength. For opaque whitewares made with calcined clay as the coarse component, the amount used will typically be less than when employing prefired materials containing fillers. This is so that the desired proportions of fillers can be incorporated into the final whitewares. The maximum particle sizes for the coarse size fractions are limited by the requirement to prevent sedimentation when the batch is in slip form, i.e. when the constituents of the final whiteware are in suspension in water for the purposes of mixing, spray drying and slip casting.Sedimentation is inhibited by arranging that the slip is partially deflocculated in addition to limiting the size of the coarser particles.
It is advantageous in the preparation of any prefired material, particularly if translucent, to give a calcination heat treatment which causes some bloating, i.e. enlargement of the larger pores whilst the finer pores continue to shrink. These larger pores can be eliminated during the milling stage to achieve a low final porosity in the milled prefired material.
The flux used in compositions according to the invention may comprise a feldspathic material such as a feldspar e.g. soda and potash feldspars and mixed soda/potash feldspars, or nepheline syenite. Mineralisers or auxiliary fluxes may also be used, such as alkaline-earth containing compounds. The flux particles, whether used to make prefired materials or the final whitewares, should be milled to as fine a median e.s.d. size as is practicable, regarded as 2-1 clam, such as 1 V2 corm. It is believed that diffusion of the fluxing ions, e.g. potassium ions, and the associated oxygen ions occurs from the flux particles into the surrounding material to form viscous liquid. Densification ensues with the material adjacent to each flux particle moving towards the flux particle. Enlarged pores consequently form in the regions between the flux particles and develop to sizes dependent on the flux particle spacing, i.e. larger pores develop with larger spacings. The finer the flux particle size, the smaller is the spacing for a given flux content, until many of the pores arising from the non-uniform shrinkage described above are small enough to be removed by the sintering process. Reducing the median size of the flux particles therefore results in lower residual porosities and a reduction in the severity of the heat treatments to achieve maximum bulk densities. The alkali content required to prevent conversion of quartz to cristobalite, which conversion results in deleterious microcracking, is supplied by the flux and can be reduced by using finer flux particles.This leads to a more uniform distribution of the fluxing ions, reducing localised excesses and deficiencies. This more efficient use of flux is valuable because the overall flux content should be kept as low as possible to minimise pyroplastic deformation. The amounts required depend not only on the prefired material or final whiteware being made but also on the content of alkali oxides in the flux and whether a mineraliser or auxiliary flux is present. For example, as a result of using higher temperatures to make the prefired body and using more finely milled flux, bone china may be prepared with about one-half of the flux used conventionally, such as about 4-10 e.g. 7% nepheline syenite compared with about 14% conventionally.
The prefired materials can be milled to a finer size than for the coarse size fraction and be used as a filler or as part of a mixture of fillers. The amounts of fillers used depend on the type of prefired material or final whiteware being made and are limited by the amounts of the other constituents required in these materials. In addition, for quartz and cristobalite (which undergo a sizeable contraction on cooling) the maximum amounts used may be limited by the necessity to avoid cracking the ware on cooling. As stated earlier, fillers are not generally inert. Quartz and cristobalite are progressively converted into viscous liquid by alkali oxides diffusing into them. Bone ash converts to p-tricalcium phosphate and some of the surplus calcium oxide temporarily acts as a flux, forming anorthite later.
The median sizes of quartz and cristobalite particles used to make prefired materials can be coarser than those used in the final whitewares as the efficiency of particle packing is of no consequence in the former whereas it is important in the latter. Prefired materials are also usually given more severe heat treatments than those of the final whitewares in which they are incorporated, and of course they also undergo these heat treatments as well.
Consequently, as quartz and cristobalite dissolve, coarser particles of these materials could be used when making the prefired materials to offset the greater dissolution. The large contraction which quartz undergoes on cooling requires its particles to be smaller than those used conventionally to maximise the number of quartz grains that remain bonded.
For cristobalite, the median size should be smaller still to maximise the number of grains that remain fully attached to the matrix. The median size for quartz should be in the range 3 to 8 clam, preferably 5 to 6 Clam, whereas that for cristobalite should be 2 to 5 clam, preferably 2 to 3 Clam. The median size for a-alumina is selected on the bases of particle packing and cost. A median size in the range 3 to 8 um is appropriate. The same range can be used for wollastonite. The median size of bone ash particles used conventionally is about 3 to 5 um. A similar size, or 1-2 or 1-3 microns, is suitable for the reformulated bone china.
Body stains may be incorporated in the prefired materials and the final whitewares as required.
Diminution of the clay in the formulations may mean that the whitewares require additions of polymeric plasticisers to be formable. The current commercially employed plastic forming techniques ('plastic' is relatively stiff body) might then not be applicable.
However, the tableware industry is changing rapidly to powder pressing where possible, as this is less labour intensive. The new bodies will be suitable for this technique with small additions of binders. It is envisaged, however, that injection moulding can be introduced as a forming technique for objects currently made plastically, or in some cases by slip casting, which cannot be formed by powder pressing. The remainder could be made, as at present, using slip casting or pressure casting.
Injection moulding as currently practised, with waxes or thermoplastic polymer additions to the powdered ceramic, is not ideal for whiteware manufacture, because of the extremely long and costly binder bum-out times and the cost of the polymer binder. Using water and a water-soluble polymer as the binder with compositions according to the invention is quite suitable for whitewares which do not require to meet the close tolerances required for engineering ceramics.
The use of fine fluxes, cristobalite or quartz in conventional whiteware formulations although improving fracture toughness, leads to poor particle packing and consequent increased shrinkage during drying and firing. With bodies containing a high percentage of clay, the poor packing exacerbates the non-uniform shrinkage problem.
The invention will now be described by way of example.
EXAMPLE 1: WHITEWARE WITH OUARTZ AS THE FILLER Replacement for electrical porcelain, vitrified hotelware and a vitrified replacement for earthenware. Also suitable for sanitaryware for which the flux may be changed to a soda or mixed soda/potash feldspar.
Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Prefired China Clay* 40% 25 um Quartz 30% 5 Sum Potash feldspar 15% 2 um Ball clay 15% submicron * Commercial material fired at 1500-15500C, of low (i.e. < 7% or even < 5%) porosity.
The whiteware was made by firing at 1260-1280"C for 3 hours.
EXAMPLE 2: WHITEWARE WITH ALUMINA AND OUARTZ AS THE FILLER Replacement for high-strength electrical porcelain and high-strength tableware. 'Half-way house' between Examples 1 and 3.
Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Prefired china clay 40% 25 um a-alumina 15% 5 to 6 um Quartz 15% 5 pm Sum Potash feldspar 15% 2 um Ball clay 15% submicron EXAMPLE 3: WHITEWARE WITH ALUMINA AS THE FILLER Replacement for high-strength electrical porcelain and high-strength tableware Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Prefired china clay 40% 25 urn a-alumina 30% 5 to 6 urn Potash feldspar 15% 2 um Ball clay 15% submicron The whiteware was made by firing at 1 3000C for 3 hours.
EXAMPLE 4: BONE CHINAS Prefired Material A Made With a Low-iron Content Clav Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Bone ash 37% 2 clam * China clay or halloysite with low-iron content 27l/2% micron-submicron Calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) 81/2% 2 um Aluminium trihydroxide 13% 2 um Silica (e.g. quartz) 10% 2 um Nepheline syenite 3% 2 urn This material is prefired at 1320-1340 C for up to 3 hours.
* The clay component can be increased or decreased with appropriate adjustments to the amounts of aluminium trihydroxide, quartz and bone ash employed.
Prefired Material B Made Without Clav Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Bone ash 34% 2 urn Aluminium trihydroxide 34% 2 um Silica (e.g. quartz) 23% 2 urn Calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) 9% 2 urn This material is prefired at 1320-13400C for up to 3 hours.
Note that a range of compositions between A and B can be made.
Prefired Material C Made with a High Content of Bone Ash Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Bone Ash 60% 2 urn China clay or halloysite with low iron content 12% micron-submicron Aluminium trihydroxide 12% 2 urn Silica (e.g. quartz) 10% 2 urn Calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) 2% 2 urn Nepheline syenite 4% 2 urn This material is prefired at 1320-13400C for 3 hours.
Final Bodies I and II Made with Clav Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Prefired Bodies A or B 60% 15 urn Bone Ash 24% 2 urn Nepheline syenite 6% 2 urn *Clay 10% micron-submicron Prefired Material A is used for Final Body I for which the raw clay component is a china clay or halloysite which contains as little iron oxide as possible (typically less than or equal to approximately 0.4% Fe203). Prefired Material B is used for Final Body II and has a very low iron oxide content. Consequently, a clay or mixture of clays containing a higher iron oxide content, up to about 1%, can be employed. This allows ball clay to be used with advantages for particle packing efficiency and green strength.
The final body is fired at 1260-1280"C for 3 hours.
Final Bodv III Made Without Clav Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Prefired Material B 62% 15 urn to 20 urn Bone Ash 20% 2 urn Nepheline syenite 4% 2 urn Reactive alumina (e.g. y-alumina) 4l/2% submicron Quartz 91/2% 2 Am This final body is fired at 1260-1280"C for 3 hours.
Al(OH)3 cannot be used as the alumina component unless heat treated to drive off its constituent water.
Final Bodv IV Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Prefired Material C 60% 15 um *Anorthite 25% 2 um Nepheline syenite 5% 2 urn China clay or halloysite with low-iron content 10% micron-submicron This final body is fired at 12800C for 3 hours.
*Anorthite can be prepared by calcining the molar proportions of calcium carbonate (e.g.
chalk), aluminium trihydroxide or other hydrated reactive alumina and silica (e.g. quartz) to make CaO.A1203.2SiO2. Calcination at temperatures up to 13500C and median particle sizes of 2 urn for the components are used to obtain a high degree of anorthite formation.
The calcined material is then milled to a median size of approximately 2 um. The absence of flux in this calcination procedure cuts down the amount of glass arising in the product.
Objects made of Final Bodies I to IV may be biscuit fired at temperatures up to 1280"C for 3 hours. Some objects may require support to prevent distortion. Glost firing (i.e. to fire on the glaze) may be carried out using temperatures up to 12800C. Some objects may be once-fired to 12800C with the glaze applied. Conventionally, glazes are fired-on at temperatures around 1100"C. The higher temperature at which glazes can be fired-on allows more scratch-resistant glazes, which do not contain lead oxide, to be applied.
EXAMPLE 5 FINE TRANSLUCENT WHITEWARE BASED ON ANORTHITE This is a new composition which makes a white, translucent ware because of the use of aluminium trihydroxide or other hydrated or reactive alumina, which has a very low iron oxide content. Anorthite porcelain has no conventional equivalent and contains more than 50% by weight of anorthite, which is expected to be a solid-solution compound incorporating some cations in addition to calcium, aluminium and silicon, such as sodium and potassium. The body may contain small amounts of other crystalline phases, such as mullite or diopside, and the balance is glass. Anorthite has a low thermal expansion coefficient and being the major phase gives anorthite porcelain a lower thermal expansion coefficient than bone china and hence improved thermal shock resistance.
Prefired Material 1 Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Aluminium trihydroxide 34% 2 um Silica (e.g. quartz) 39% 2 um Calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) 241/2% 2 urn Magnesium carbonate 2l/2% 2 um The magnesium carbonate could be replaced in whole or part by other compounds containing magnesium, e.g. magnesium hydroxide, provided approximately the same proportions of magnesium and the other cations are achieved in the prefired composition.
Prefired Material 2 Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Aluminium trihydroxide 40% 2 urn Silica (e.g. quartz) 36% 2 urn Calcium carbonate (e.g. chalk) 19% 2 urn Bone ash 5% 2 urn When a reactive alumina, e.g. y-alumina, or other hydrated alumina is employed to make Prefired Materials 1 or 2, adjustment to the amounts of all the components used must be made to achieve approximately the same proportion of aluminium in the composition of the prefired material.
In Prefired Material 2, bone ash is employed as a flux. As alternatives, artificial hydroxyapatite, p-tricalcium phosphate, orthophosphoric acid or phosphorus pentoxide may be used to supply the same amount of phosphorus. Adjustment should then be made to the calcium carbonate employed to obtain the same calcium content. Prefired Materials 1 and 2 are fired at 1320-1340"C for 3 hours.
Final Bodies A and B Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Prefired Material 1 or 2 60% 15 to 20 um *Prefired Material 1 or 2 20% 2 um Nepheline syenite 5% 2 um Silica (e.g. quartz) 5% 2 um **Clay 10% micron-submicron Final Body A employs Prefired Material 1 and Final Body B employs Prefired Material 2.
* Finely ground Prefired Materials 1 and 2 may be replaced with anorthite made without a fluxing component as in Bone China Final Body IV. These final bodies may be densified by firing in the range 1250-1280"C for 3 hours.
** For the whitest bodies an expensive low-iron content clay would be used or alternatively the clay component could be replaced by a combination of a reactive alumina (e.g.
y-alumina) and finely milled quartz. As the final body contains 80% of prefired material with a very low iron oxide content, less expensive clays may be employed.
Anorthite porcelains may be fired as bone china Final Bodies I to IV.
As anorthite porcelain contains a low glass content (less than 30%) and the crystals of anorthite are small, strengths comparable to those of bone china should result, i.e.
100-140 MPa for the modulus of rupture.
The low coefficient of thermal expansion of anorthite porcelain (- 5 x 10-6/"C) coupled with the high temperature at which the glaze can be fired-on (up to 1 2800C), should allow a scratch-resistant glaze which does not contain lead oxide to be used. The high strength and good thermal shock resistance coupled with a durable glaze makes this white translucent material very suitable for use as hotelware and highly serviceable domestic tableware of high quality. Its lower coefficient of thermal expansion than bone china and its higher strength than hard porcelain will give it better thermal shock resistance than either of these translucent wares.It is therefore better suited for applications involving fairly rapid changes of temperature, such as in transfer from oven to table and for placing on heaters to maintain the food temperature.
EXAMPLE 6 BONE CHINAS CONTAINING LOW BONE ASH CONTENTS Bone chinas having lower contents of bone ash may be made by mixing Prefired Bone China Material A or B of Example 4 with Prefired Material 1 or 2 for anorthite-based whiteware (Example 5) to make the coarse component of the final bone china. The mixture, which can be in any desired proportion, would be used as in Final Bodies I, II and III of Example 4.
EXAMPLE 7 OUARTZ-CONTAINING FINE TRANSLUCENT WHITEWARE Prefired Material Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Quartz 40% 5 um Potash feldspar 30% 2 um Aluminium trihydroxide 30% 2 um This material was prefired at 1 3000C for 2 hours.
Final Bodv Prefired body 60% 25 um Quartz 16% 5 um Potash feldspar 14% 2 urn *Clav 10% micron-submicron This final body was fired at 1210-12300C for 2 hours.
* Clay or a mixture of clays having iron oxide up to about 1% can be used. The clay can be replaced with a combination of quartz and y-alumina (or other reactive alumina) as in Bone China Final Body III.
EXAMPLE 8 REPLACEMENT FOR HARD PORCELAIN A whiteware having similar characteristics to hard porcelain, but which can be fired at a lower temperature, of about 12500C compared with 14000C - 1450"C, in an oxidising rather than a reducing atmosphere.
Prefired Material Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Aluminium trihydroxide 30% 2 urn Quartz 50% 2 urn Potash feldspar 20% 2 um The prefired material is fired at 1 3000C for 3 hours to dissolve all the quartz.
Final Whiteware Component Amount Approximate Median Particle Size Prefired body 55% Quartz 16% Potash feldspar 19% *Clay 10% *The clay component can be a single clay or a mixture with an iron oxide content up to about 1%. It can also be replaced by a combination of fine quartz and a reactive alumina, such as y-alumina as in Bone China Final Body III.
The invention extends to a range of milled prefired materials, prepared from starting materials with low iron contents, usable as a component in making white, translucent fired articles (whitewares) based on anorthite and mullite. The materials can be employed as prefired, particulate (milled) components in the formation of certain translucent whitewares to make them resistant to deformation during firing. The prefired materials are dense in particulate form and, by virtue of their composition, resistant to deformation at the biscuit and glost firing temperatures of the final whitewares, and their incorporation in the whitewares imparts some creep resistance. The use of the prefired materials allows the whitewares to have reduced clay contents, and this reduces deformation arising from anisotropic shrinkage caused by preferential clay platelet alignment.Further advantages can result from the use of the prefired materials, such as high strength, good thermal shock resistance, improved glaze serviceability and whiteness.
The prefired materials can be used to make whitewares using, as one possibility, bone ash. Whitewares formulated with sufficient bone ash to yield a minimum of 35% by weight of tricalcium phosphate after firing can be called bone chinas in the U.K. according to British Standard 5416:1990. Those containing insufficient tricalcium phosphate to meet the British Standard might qualify to be called bone chinas in other countries.
The prefired materials can also be used, as an alternative possibility, to make novel types of whiteware containing no tricalcium phosphate. Such whitewares, when having a high anorthite content, look very similar to bone china, and when (as preferable) also having some mullite content, display improved resistance to pyroplastic deformation.
Compositions of the fired material according to the invention that have been prepared and whose resistance to deformation during subsequent firing has been examined are given by way of example in Tables 1 and 2. (Densities are of the bulk prefired material, i.e. before milling.) In order to assess pyroplasticity, rectangular bars 20 mm x 120 mm x 3.5 mm were formed by pressing granulated powders. To minimise distortion of the test bars during the first firing, the aluminium trihydroxide was lightly calcined prior to being mixed with the other constituents to convert it to a reactive alumina by driving off water. For the first firing, the bars were fully supported whilst being heated at 13500C for 3 hours. The bars were then refired at 12800C for 3 hours with a central span 85 mm long, unsupported. This was to assess the resistance to pyroplastic deformation at 1280 C. The deformation at the centre of the bar was measured between the top surface of the bar and a straight line connecting its two ends. This was used as a measure of sagging. The bulk density of the prefired mixtures was measured as a rough guide to how the materials densified.
TABLE 1: Bone ash-containing Prefired Materials
AMOUNT CODE CaCO3 Al(OH)3 SiO2 BONE ASH DENSITY OF (g/cm3) SAGGING (mm) B-l 29.60 30.20 35.50 4.70 1.89 4.40 B-2 22.00 34.00 39.00 5.00 2.38 2.78 B-3 22.00 38.97 36.03 3.00 1.94 1.91 B-4 20.00 38.97 36.03 5.00 2.38 1.78 B-5 19.00 39.97 36.03 5.00 2.35 1.45 B-6 19.00 39.97 36.53 4.50 2.42 3.00 B-7 19.00 40.47 36.03 4.50 2.26 1.03 B-8 18.00 40.47 36.53 5.00 2.44 2.32 B-9 18.50 40.47 36.03 5.00 2.42 2.04 B-10 18.50 39.97 36.53 5.00 1 2.44 2.62 B-ll 18.00 41.25 36.50 4.25 2.40 1.14 B-12 18.50 41.00 36.50 4.00 2.30 1.71 B-13 19.00 40.00 37.00 4.00 2.35 1.55 B-14 19.00 41.00 36.50 3.50 2.12 1.45 B-15 18.00 41.00 37.00 4.00 2.45 1.64 TABLE 2 :MgCO3-containing Prefired Materials
AMOUNT CODES CaCO3 A1(OH)3 SiO2 MgCO3 ZnO DENSITY OF (g/cm3) SAGGING (mm) M-l 25.28 35.21 37.25 2.26 j 0 2.40 6.30 M-2 25.00 38.90 33.60 2.50 0 2.43 11.35 M-3 24.40 38.05 32.85 4.70 0 2.46 12.75 M-4 24.05 38.60 35.00 2.35 0 2.06 4.36 M-5 23.50 37.75 34.20 4.55 0 2.47 6.20 M-6 20.40 39.30 37.90 2.40 0 2.42 1.19 M-7 20.15 39.60 37.90 2.35 0 2.37 0.97 M-8 19.95 39.85 37.85 2.35 0 2.37 0.92 M-9 19.90 41.00 36.75 2.35 0 2.24 1.11 M-10 19.75 40.10 37.80 2.35 0 2.33 1.05 M-11 19.70 41.35 36.65 2.30 0 2.13 0.74 M-12 19.70 40.35 37.60 2.35 0 2.36 0.80 M-13 19.60 42.00 36.05 2.35 0 2.09 1.01 M-14 19.55 41.00 37.15 2.30 0 2.26 0.62 M-15 19.45 41.65 36.55 2.35 0 2.05 0.67 M-16 19.35 40.35 37 95 2.35 0 2.35 0.71 M-17 19.35 40.60 37.70 2.35 0 2.36 0.54 M-18 19.30 41.35 37.05 2.30 0 2.15 0.45 M-19 19.20 40.30 37.40 2.35 0.75 2.38 0.48 It can be seen from Tables 1 and 2 that compositions having more than 22 wt% CaCO3 had poor deformation resistance. These developed little or no mullite. The range of compositions for fired materials according to this aspect of the invention are given in Table 3.
Table 3 : Range of Compositions CaCO3 17 - 22 wt% preferably 18-21% Al(OH)3 38-43% SiO2 34 - 39% preferably 36-39% either Bone ash up to 5% orMgCO3 up to 5% ZnO up to 1% The best composition from the point of view of resistance to deformation and densification at 12800C was M19. However, it was not as translucent as M17 which had the next best combination of low deformation and high density. M17 is believed to be composed of anorthite, mullite, glass and possibly some diopside. It has been used to make whitewares containing tricalcium phosphate and those without bone ash in their formulation.
Other compositions have been used successfully to make whitewares. Those containing less mullite can confer sufficient resistance to deformation for biscuit and glost firing temperatures lower than 12800C and they can be more translucent.
During calcination for all the compositions in the specified range given in Table 3, the starting materials should be converted to a mixture that is mainly anorthite plus a significant amount of mullite. The anorthite is likely to be a solid-solution compound incorporating any sodium or potassium impurities in the quartz and other starting materials.
In compositions with the lower calcium carbonate contents, more mullite is formed.
A balance has to be struck between pyroplastic deformation resistance and translucency.
With more mullite, the translucency is reduced but the deformation resistance is improved.
When magnesium carbonate is used to effect densification, diopside and possibly akermanite develop. When bone ash is used, more glassy phase is introduced, good for translucency but bad for deformation resistance.
Although the calcined product will contain porosity, particularly resulting from the evolution of water when hydroxides of aluminium are used, it should be composed of sufficiently large dense regions that after milling can yield dense aggregates with a median size of about 20 um. Fortunately, during milling, cracks move towards the larger pores so that these pores are largely eliminated in the milled product.
A well-reacted, dense calcined product can be produced by a suitable combination of fine particle sizes and intimate mechanical mixing of the constituents coupled with a sufficiently severe heat treatment. With coarser particles and less effective mixing prior to calcination, the heat treatment has to be more severe. That is, higher calcination temperatures and/or longer calcination times will be required. With starting materials of preferably under 3 clam, e.g. about 2 um median size that are well mixed in a ball mill in water, suitable calcination heat treatments are 13500C for 3 hours and can exceed 1400"C, e.g. 1415"C for 15 minutes. The latter heat treatment is appropriate for calcination in a rotary kiln.During calcination there is little or no tendency for the materials to stick to high-alumina refractories or to alumina crucibles.
Temperatures in excess of those used for the final whitewares are required for the calcination heat treatment to effect the necessary densification. This is a consequence of the compositional design of the prefired materials. As a beneficial result, the prefired materials are resistant to deformation at the biscuit and glost firing temperatures of the final whitewares.
The prefired materials are used as the coarse components of the final whitewares.
For this they have median particle size of typically about 20 um with maximum particle sizes less than 80 urn and preferably less than 50 urn. They can be used additionally as medium-sized components with median particle sizes of about 2 to 3 urn.
With prefired material as a coarse component, fluxes and fillers can be finer than used conventionally without loss of particle packing efficiency and consequent increase in shrinkage. Thus bone ash, feldspar and nepheline syenite when used can have median particle sizes of about 2 to 3 urn or finer, whereas conventionally bone ash would be 3 to 5 urn and the fluxes would be around 10 urn. The use of a flux with a finer particle size leads to a reduction in the residual porosity of the fired whiteware and a consequent improvement in fracture toughness and strength. Finer bone ash yields finer tricalcium phosphate grains which, for a given tricalcium phosphate content, are more effective at scattering light.Consequently, a whiteware containing a lower level of tricalcium phosphate than required by the British Standard can have a similar appearance to bone china if the tricalcium phosphate is of finer size.
The use of coarse, prefired materials allows the clay content of the whiteware to be reduced to 20% and below without loss of particle packing efficiency. The use of a low clay content reduces the unwanted consequences of anisotropic shrinkage resulting from preferential clay particle alignment. In whitewares formed from spray dried granules, clay platelet alignment in the compacted granules undesirably causes enlarged pores to develop during firing. The resulting porosity reduces the fracture toughness and strength of the whiteware. In slip cast wares, the clay platelets tend to become aligned with their large plane faces parallel to the mould surfaces. The anisotropic shrinkage from the alignment undesirably causes distortion of the whiteware during drying and firing.In addition, stresses arising in firing because of anisotropic shrinkage can give rise to the formation of fissures, which can act as fracture-initiating flaws and hence can limit the strength of the ware.
Fired wares cast in multi-part moulds often exhibit seam lines at the positions where separate parts of the mould join. This is caused by differential firing shrinkage resulting from the way the clay is aligned in these regions during casting. The reduction in the clay content should reduce this problem and improve the quality of the cast wares.
Lower clay contents allow whitewares to be made with reduced contents of iron oxide and titania, which improves whiteness. Altematively with a lower total clay content, a higher proportion of the clay may be ball clay before the iron content (introduced via the ball clay) rises to absolute levels which discolour the whitewares.
itewares made with such low clay content can be formed by powder pressing, slip casting, pressure casting and are ideally suited to injection moulding. With powder pressing and the casting techniques all the shapes required for tableware can be produced.
In modern practice, powder pressing is becoming, where suitable, the preferred technique as it can be automated and the pressed ware does not need a separate drying operation.
Examples of Whitewares made with Prefired Material M W : Whiteware made with 35% bone ash Component Amount Approx. Median Particle Size M17 50% 20um Bone ash 35% 2 slm Nepheline syenite 5% 9um Clay 10% micron-submicron W2 : Whiteware made with 40% bone ash Component Amount Approx. Median Particle Size M17 50% 20 cam Bone ash 40% 2 m Clay 10% micron-submicron More bone ash can be introduced by reducing the content of the prefired material.
W3 : Whiteware made without bone ash Component Amount Approx. Median Particle Size M17 60% 20 cm M17 25% 2 pm Clay 15% micron-submicron The clay used to make these examples was a china clay with low iron-oxide content.
However. whitewares have also been prepared with half the china clay replaced with ball clay to improve the formability and green (unfired) strength.
The pvroplasticities ofWl, W2 and W3 were compared with that of conventionallymade bone china by determining the sagging of test bars having the previously given dimensions. The bone ash-containing whitewares Wl and W2 were first fired at 12800C for 3 hours either fully supported or with an 85 mm central span unsupported. The bars which had been fully supported were then given a second firing. this time at 12800C for 3 hours with the central span unsupported. The first firing tested the behaviour of these materials at the temperature required to densify them. The second firing represents a glost firing. The conventional bone china was given a first and second firing in the same way but at 12300C for 3 hours.The results are given in Table 4.
TABLE 4: Sagging Data on Bone Ash-containing Whitewares Sagging in mm Whiteware First Firing Second Firing Wl 7.5 2.2 W2 8.9 2.4 Conventional Bone China 10.0 6.6 From the table it can be seen that conventional bone china sags more during the first firing and considerably more during the second firing. When conventional bone china was given a second firing (like Wl and W2) at 12800C for 3 hours it sagged by 30.4 mm.
These results show that the reformulated bone ash-containing whitewares would be able to be glazed at substantially higher temperatures than the conventional material. This will allow a higher-melting selection of more serviceable glazes to be designed and applied.
In addition, for those whitewares containing less tricalcium phosphate than the conventional bone china the thermal expansion coefficient is lower. For example, W1 has a thermal expansion coefficient of 6.5 x 10-6/ C compared with 8.5 x 10-6/OC for conventional bone china. This should impart improved thermal shock resistance.
Whitewares made with no bone ash can have a very low tendency to sag. Test bars of W3 sag by only 1.5 mm on being fired for the second time at 12800C for 3 hours.
W3 has a low thermal expansion coefficient of 5 x 10-6/ C. This material should have very good thermal shock resistance and be suitable for a glaze that is very serviceable.
It could be glazed at even higher temperatures than 12800C as it sags by only 2.1 mm when fired at 1340"C for 3 hours.

Claims (18)

1. A milled fired material comprising as ingredients from 38-43% (by weight) chemically refined aluminium trihydroxide (or the equivalent in other chemically refined hydrated or reactive alumina), 34-39% silica, 17-22% calcium carbonate (or the equivalent in calcium oxide/hydroxide), up to 5% bone ash or magnesium carbonate (or the equivalent in magnesium oxide/hydroxide) and 0-2% zinc oxide (or the equivalent in zinc hydroxide/carbonate), in which material, when fired, anorthite and mullite are present.
2. A material according to Claim 1, containing less than 0.1% by weight iron oxide.
3. A material according to Claim I or 2, comprising at least 2% (preferably at least 3%) bone ash or at least 1% (preferably at least 2%) magnesium carbonate on the foregoing basis.
4. A material according to Claim 1, 2 or 3, comprising at least 1/2% by weight zinc oxide on the foregoing basis.
5. A material according to any preceding claim, wherein the silica is from 36 to 39%, on the foregoing basis.
6. A material according to any preceding claim, wherein the calcium carbonate is from 18 to 21%, on the foregoing basis.
7. A material according to any preceding claim, wherein the chemically refined aluminium compound is calcined to drive off water prior to being mixed with the other ingredients.
8. A material according to any preceding claim, wherein the ingredients do not exceed 5 microns median particle size.
9. A material according to any preceding claim, fired at at least 1 3500C.
10. A material according to Claim 9, fired at above 1400"C.
11. A material according to any preceding claim, which is substantially equiaxed.
12. A material according to any preceding claim, which has been milled to a median particle size of from 10 to 50 microns.
13. A material according to Claim 12, which has been milled to a median particle size of from 10 to 30 microns.
14. A material according to any of Claims I to 11 which has been milled to a median particle size of from 10 to 20 microns.
15. A material according to any preceding claim, which is translucent.
16. A material according to any preceding claim, whose porosity does not exceed 7%.
17. A material according to Claim 16, whose porosity does not exceed 5%.
18. A material according to any preceding claim for use in a whiteware ceramic composition.
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CN108298974A (en) * 2018-03-28 2018-07-20 许水仙 It is a kind of can microwave heating Bone China preparation method
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