Publication detail

The Difference between Traditional and Bone Porcelain Body

SOKOLÁŘ, R. VODOVÁ, L.

Original Title

The Difference between Traditional and Bone Porcelain Body

Type

conference paper

Language

English

Original Abstract

Porcelain is a traditional ceramic material, which is manufactured for centuries from a mixture of kaolin, quartz sand and feldspar. Another type of porcelain is produces on the basis on bone ash as fluxing agent. Traditional feldspar porcelain and bone porcelain bodies were compared depending on the firing temperature. Two mixtures of kaolin and potassium feldspar or bone ash were prepared. Bone ash is more intensive fluxing agent which need lower sintering temperature (1100 °C) in comparison with feldspar porcelain (1280 °C). Main difference between compared porcelain bodies is in mineralogical composition. Traditional porcelain based on mullite, quartz and glass phase, bone porcelain contains anorthite and β-tricalcium phosphate (β-TCP) and lower content of glassy phase.

Keywords

Bone Ash, Feldspar, Mineralogical Composition, Porosity

Authors

SOKOLÁŘ, R.; VODOVÁ, L.

RIV year

2015

Released

29. 4. 2015

Publisher

Trans Tech Publications, Switzerland

Location

Switzerland

ISBN

1662-8985

Periodical

Advanced Materials Research (online)

Year of study

1

Number

1100

State

Swiss Confederation

Pages from

87

Pages to

90

Pages count

4

URL

BibTex

@inproceedings{BUT133256,
  author="Radomír {Sokolář} and Lucie {Keršnerová}",
  title="The Difference between Traditional and Bone Porcelain Body",
  booktitle="Advanced Materials Research",
  year="2015",
  series="1100",
  journal="Advanced Materials Research
 (online)",
  volume="1",
  number="1100",
  pages="87--90",
  publisher="Trans Tech Publications, Switzerland",
  address="Switzerland",
  doi="10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMR.1100.87",
  issn="1662-8985",
  url="https://www.scientific.net/AMR.1100.87.pdf"
}