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Alternate Names: C98 talc, C-98 talc
Oxide | Analysis | Formula | |
---|---|---|---|
MgO | 29.50% | 0.92 | |
Fe2O3 | 0.50% | - | |
CaO | 3.50% | 0.08 | |
K2O | 0.30% | - | |
TiO2 | 0.10% | - | |
Al2O3 | 0.30% | - | |
SiO2 | 53.50% | 1.12 | |
Oxide Weight | 109.96 | ||
Formula Weight | 109.96 |
American Talc Amtal C-98 became Natural Talc C-98 about 2018. No longer available as of March 2021.
A platy talc, mined and processed in Allamoore, Texas. A dark grey powder in the raw state but white-firing. It was used as a flux, filler and thermal expansion modifier for traditional, refractory and technical ceramic applications (wall and floor tile, tableware, sanitaryware, electrical Insulators, porcelain). It was popular in hobbyware and low temperature talc/ball clay bodies (because it was white burning and responded to deflocculation well). It was also used in technical ceramics where it functioned as the major silicate material (replacing clays and feldspars in lower grade alumina products such as steatite ceramics and low-expansion cordierite materials).
Talcs present production issues (the powders are hard to handle and wetting is difficult) and they have perceived safety issues. We are doing work substituting them for Nepheline Syenite (as of 2021) and it is working unexpectedly well.
They claimed a chemistry of 63.7% SiO2, 28.4% MgO, 6.98% CaO (strangely not mentioning the iron).
This was from a shipment received at Plainsman Clays in 2019.
Although this Montana talc (Silverline 303) is white as a raw material (vs. dark grey for the Texas material, Natural Minerals C-98), it does not fire nearly as white (even though their data sheets both claim 0.5% Fe2O3). The Montana material is often suitable as a substitute in glazes where percentages are low. If higher percentages are employed (e.g. 10% to achieve a silky matte) then color will darken if Montana talc is substituted for Texas talc. In bodies, where talc is used as a flux in low percentages (e.g. 1-3%) the color should be OK. In low temperature clay bodies, where talc was employed to adjust thermal expansion, as much as 50% is used - of course in these cases the color will be far too dark.
Texas talc contains some amorphous carbon. The carbon is not stand-alone, but as CO2 in the dolomitic part of the ore. It produces ~7% LOI between 750-850C. Even though the powder color is so much darker in the raw form, it fires whiter! But there is more going on here. On paper, both contain about 0.5% Fe2O3. But the iron species in the two talcs are different. In Texas talcs, the iron is part of the crystal lattice. But, in the Montana material, that 0.5% Fe2O3 is an external iron oxide mineral species, a physical contaminant. While the Montana material fires much darker because of this that iron seems to have little affect on the color of the raw white powder.
Texas talc (left) quickly absorbs all the water poured on it. Montana talc (right) resists whetting of the particles much more, the water is just sitting on top and has not penetrated at all.
Close-up photo. This is only 1/10th of a gram on 50 grams total. Very clean. This was a wet sieve analysis.
The body is 50:50 talc and ball clay. These are Silverline (Montana), Natural Minerals (Texas) and Cimtalc (Indiana). The Texas talc is the whitest, the Montana is the darkest.
The clear glaze is G1916Q. Fired at cone 04. The body on the left is 50:50 Old Hickory M-23 ball clay and Cimtuff talc. The body on the right is a mix of KT1-4 ball clay and C-98 talc. It is firing whiter. But this is not only because of the talc, the KT1-4 ball clay is whiter-burning than the M23.
This bowl is 13cm across yet has a wall thickness of less than 2mm and weighs only 101g! It released from the mold with no problems and dried perfectly round. But it has a key advantage over stonewares and porcelains: When this is fired at cone 04-06 it will stay round!
Materials |
Cimtuff 9115 Talc
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Materials |
Amtalc-C98
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Materials |
Silverline 303 Talc
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Sierralite Talc
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Materials |
Benwood Talc 2213
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Materials |
Magris Jetfil H 290 Talc
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Materials |
Talc
A source of MgO for ceramic glazes, a flux or thermal expansion additive in clay bodies, also used in the manufacture of cordierite. |
URLs |
https://insight-live.com/insight/share.php?z=P8uThTnFoY
Replace Talc with Nepheline Syenite in low temperature white bodies |
By Tony Hansen Follow me on |
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