Production and Industrial Adaptation of Fast Single Firing Wall Tile Opaque Glass-Ceramic Glazes Containing Borax Solid Wastes

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Keriman Karaveli Pekkan Bekir Karasu Ali Kucuk
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
8
File Size:
1054 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2008

Abstract

"Zircon (zirconium silicate) is the main opacifier of glossy, opaque, white colored, frit-based wall tile glazes. However, zirconia containing frits employed in the preparation of these glazes increase the production cost and therefore, limit zircon usage as a raw material at industrial scale. With the present study, it was searched whether borax solid wastes could be evaluated as a component in the starting relevant frit recipes. The wastes were obtained from Eti Maden Kirka Boron Company of Turkiye. Frit production, glaze preparation, application, and fast single-firing of glazed wall tiles were conducted under laboratory working conditions in Anadolu University, Department of Materials Science and Engineering laboratories. Beside standard tests applied to the final glazed wall tiles, color and gloss analyses of the fired glazes were conducted with a spectrophoto-meter and a gloss-meter. Characterization of these newly produced glass-ceramic glazes was made by X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and energy dispersive X-ray (EDX) techniques. IntroductionFrits are the indispensable constituents of most industrial glazes which mature at temperatures below 1150 °C [1]. In the traditional opaque glazes used in wall tile industry, opacity usually originates through hardening of glass matrix by adding high amounts of zirconia containing frits into the glaze batch [2]. Nowadays, researches point out that certain type of glass-ceramic layers can be alternatively employed as tile coatings lowering the use of zirconia containing expensive opaque frits. A rather high crystallization capacity of glass- ceramic glazes due to zirconia presence in glass network makes them suitable candidate as a glaze coating with a desirable micro-structure. One of the best methods to obtain an opaque glaze surface is to induce a crystal phase in the coating, whose refractive index differs significantly from that of the glassy matrix. The opacity of such coating is determined by the diffusion, refraction and reflection of light through the layer containing emerging crystals, and the degree of opacity mainly depends on the size and quantity of crystals. The development of glazes not consisting of expensive or toxic components is of special interest [3]."
Citation

APA: Keriman Karaveli Pekkan Bekir Karasu Ali Kucuk  (2008)  Production and Industrial Adaptation of Fast Single Firing Wall Tile Opaque Glass-Ceramic Glazes Containing Borax Solid Wastes

MLA: Keriman Karaveli Pekkan Bekir Karasu Ali Kucuk Production and Industrial Adaptation of Fast Single Firing Wall Tile Opaque Glass-Ceramic Glazes Containing Borax Solid Wastes. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2008.

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