Monthly Tech-Tip from Tony Hansen SignUp

No tracking! No ads!

1-9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | Frits | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z

Boraq 3

Description: Plainsman Plastic Gerstley Borate Substitute

Oxide Analysis Formula
CaO 27.30% 0.82
K2O 0.50% 0.01
MgO 2.00% 0.08
Na2O 3.20% 0.09
B2O3 26.50% 0.64
Al2O3 2.40% 0.04
SiO2 11.90% 0.33
Fe2O3 0.10% -
LOI 26.05%n/a
Oxide Weight 124.58
Formula Weight 168.47

Notes

Boraq 3 was recommended for cone six and above where high CaO was needed (e.g. for chrome tin reds and pinks and for glazes that rely a lot on the boron-blue effect, that is, a lot of calcium borate crystalization). Good examples of this type of glaze are transparents that have a lot of bluish-white cloulding that opacifies them. It was 84 Boraq 1 and 16 whiting.

It was developed under code number L3127I.

Related Information

Links

Materials Boraq
This Gerstley Borate substitute was available during the early 2000s. Its recipe and development are well documented but two materials are no longer available.
Materials Boraq 2
Typecodes Flux Source
Materials that source Na2O, K2O, Li2O, CaO, MgO and other fluxes but are not feldspars or frits. Remember that materials can be flux sources but also perform many other roles. For example, talc is a flux in high temperature glazes, but a matting agent in low temperatures ones. It can also be a flux, a filler and an expansion increaser in bodies.
URLs https://insight-live.com/insight/share.php?z=eeukDwSTt4
The Development of a Gerstley Borate substitute - Boraq
By Tony Hansen
Follow me on

Got a Question?

Buy me a coffee and we can talk

 



https://backup.digitalfire.com, All Rights Reserved
Privacy Policy