Feldspar
Chemistry
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Volatiles
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Links to Other Materials
- Anorthite - Related
- Albite - Related
- ANORTHOCLASE - Related
- ANORTHOSITE - Related
- Orthoclase - Related
- ORTHOSE - Related
- Cache
Hazards
- Feldspar
Miscellaneous
- Family: Feldspar
- Region: None
- Mined At: Unspecified
- Raw Mineral: No
- Generic: Yes
Notes
Feldspar powders are made from crushed crystalline rock containing a mixture of aluminum silicates of sodium and potassium (with minor amounts of lithium or calcium). They contain 10-15% alkali (K2O, Na2O) and melt well at medium to high temperatures and are an economic source of flux. Manufacturers do a good job of delivering such uniform and clean products when one considers that feldspar deposits vary widely in composition and contain iron particles and other impurities.
Generally high potash feldspars are employed in bodies and promote vitrification by forming a glassy phase that 'cements' more refractory particles together and triggers the formation of mullite from clay mineral. In glazes it promotes melting at medium and high temperatures (feldspars are the primary ingredient in most high temperature raw glazes).
In glazes sodium feldspars are most common and used mainly as a source of alkalis. Since feldspars are mineral compounds of silica, alumina and fluxes; they are often viewed as 'natural frits' and are among the relatively few insoluble sources of K2O, Na2O and Li2O. No other raw material is closer to being a complete glaze on its own than feldspar. Since feldspars contain a complex mix of oxides, ceramic chemistry calculations are needed to 'juggle' a recipe to achieve the desired balance of fluxing oxides with alumina and silica.
Many feldspars begin to melt around 2100F (1150C) and make good glaze bases because they contribute alumina and silica in forms that participate well in the melt. Feldspars tend to work well in fast fire glazes because they remain relatively inert until the later stages of firing.
However, 'flux-saturated' glazes with high feldspar contents tend to be chemically unbalanced and thus make poor metallic oxide bases for functional ware. In addition, high feldspar can contribute to a high surface tension in the glaze melt and this may lead to high bubble population (which produces milkiness in the fired matrix). Stoneware glazes using large amounts of feldspar as a flux often craze because high-expansion sodium and potassium predominate.
Strictly speaking, the term 'feldspar' refers to a family of minerals with a specific crystalline presence. Theoretically feldspar appears in many different types classifiable by chemistry and crystal structure (eg. microcline, hyalophane, celsian, orthoclase, albite, oligoclase, andesine, labradorite, bytownite, anorthite). However, commercially available feldspars tend to predominate in one specific mineral kind with lesser amounts of another and traces of others.
Geologists see feldspar as a mineral and classify feldspars as mainly as albite, microcline, orthoclase and anorthite. However, technically minded ceramists tend to view feldspar as a 'warehouse of oxides' rather than a mineral. For this reason other materials like cornwall stone and nepheline syenite, which have similar chemistry, are classified as feldspars by the ceramics industry.
(Richard Willis)
Any of the aluminum silicate minerals containing alkalis and having very similar chemical structures, especially in their crystal geometry and ratio of alkali metal(s) to aluminum and silicon, and thereby known mineralogically as aluminosilicates. A further classification distinguishes two series of these aluminosilicates based on their continuums (as rock-making minerals) from sodium to potassium and from sodium to calcium, labeling the first series as alkali feldspars and the second series as
plagioclase feldspars.
As clays (i.e., as hydrous aluminosilicates) feldspars are distinguished by their relative purity of clay + alkali; free, for the most part, of any significant traces of the non-alkali metals or earths so common to other earths .
Feldspathic earths are usually understood to be the rocks made up principally by feldspars and/or feldspathoids (such as gneisses, granites, magmas and pegmatites) available as natural deposits of decomposed rock or industrially packaged rock milled to varieties of grain-size powder. In the broadest sense, given that feldspars constitute more than 50% of the Earths crust, most any earth is feldspathic even if containing only traces; so an earth especially w
ith respect to earths used in making up ceramic clays and glazes is normally considered feldspathic when the feldspar/feldspathoid content is sufficient to make a real difference one way or another in formulations. As pegmatites are the mother-rocks of feldspars, so are the feldspars the mother-rocks of kaolin and its similars.
commonly used forms (as often labeled commercially)
albite sodium feldspar Na2O, Al2O3, 6SiO2
sanidine potassium feldspar K2O, Al2O3, 6SiO2
nepheline sod-pot feldspar K2O, 3Na2O, 4Al2O3, 8SiO2
anorthite calcium feldspar CaO, Al2O3, 2SiO2
labradorite sod-cal feldspar Na2O, CaO, Al2O3, SiO2
pegmatite (*) sod-pot-cal feldspar Na2/K2O/CaO, Al2O3, 6SiO2
spodumene lithium feldspar Li2O, Al2O3, 4SiO2
celsian barium feldspar BaO, Al2O3, 2SiO2
(*) Though pegmatites are mother-racks for feldspars, and not properly feldspars, recipes listing so-called sod-pot-cal feldspars are usually asking for pegmatites, such as Cornwall Stone, for example. As well, feldspathoids are often liberally labeled commercially as feldspars, or, more accurately, as feldspathics.
typical comparative analyses
potassium feldspar K2O 16.89, Al2O3 18.43, SiO2 66.84
sodium feldspar Na2O 11.82, Al2O3 19.56, SiO2 68.82
calcium feldspar CaO 20.14. Al2O3 36.70, SiO2 43.16
pegmatite (generic) K2O 4.79, Na2O 3.92, CaO 1.44, Fe2O3 0.35, Al2O3 15.11, SiO2 74.23
pegmatite (Cornwall) K2O 3.68, Na2O 3.61, CaO 1.68, Fe2O3 0.26, Al2O3 17.37, SiO2 74.55
Feldspars are notoriously short clays, as natural clays go, which is to say that they are on the side of the less elastic clays, and subsequently are rarely used alone but rather in blends with more elastic clays to give them the manageability for a given need. So-called stoneware clays labeled exotically under names such as Rick's Mix, Helen's Biscuit, etcetera, are almost always blends of feldspars (for the benefits of more alkali and silicon) and earthenware clays (for handling
preferences prior to firing and for color after) and kaolin (for strength while firing and for color after). Feldspars usually fire to white, and many so-called white earthenware clays are in fact blends of common buff clays and large portions of feldspars and/or feldspathic clays. White translucent porcelain clays are typically blends of kaolin, feldspar and silica; the kaolin and the feldspar providing the whiteness; the feldspar and silica providing the translucency; and kaolin providing the
post to hold the vitrifying feldspar and silica upright during firing and until cooled.
At temperatures below 1190ºC feldspars are strong refractories requiring strong mid- to low-temperature fluxing agents, such as zinc, lead and/or boron, to bring their silica to a melt. At temperatures over 1190ºC the alkalis inherent to feldspars do the required fluxing, helped when and if needed by non-alkali fluxes and/or other alkalis not present in the particular feldspar(s) being used. Fusion temperatures for the great variety of feldspars are, all else being equal, directly determined by th
e type and proportion of alkalis present in relation to the silica present. Generally, potassium feldspars are the preferred forms to compose body pastes, and soda feldspars to compose glaze coverings; and, for both clays and glazes, the varieties of feldspars provide water-insoluble forms of the otherwise soluble alkalis which define the feldspars.
Magmatic/volcanic feldspars (analcime, etc.), feldspathoids (sodalite, etc.) and feldspathics (pumice, etc.), as Natures fritted feldspars, equally provide water-insoluble forms of their alkalis but also forms which usually fuse at much lower temperatures than their granite-metamorphic complements. see alkali, calcinates, clay, glaze, rock, silicates, soil, etc., as well as feldspars indivi
dually.
Properties
Body Maturity -
Feldspar is the most important body flux for cone 2+. Many clays and other body materials contain feldspar. The classic cone 10 porcelain recipe is 25% each of feldspar, ball clay, silica and kaolin.
Linked Articles
A Low Cost Tester of Glaze Melt Fluidity
This device to measure glaze melt fluidity helps you better understand your glazes and materials and solve all sorts of problems.Formulating a Porcelain
Understanding the functions of each of the major materials in a high temperature porcelain gives you the ability to tune their amounts and choose brand names to make the porcelain you want.
URLs
- Wikipedia Definition - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feldspar
Suppliers
- Generic
Authors
- Tony Hansen (Owner)
Pictures
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Aquamarine On Feldspar

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Augite Feldspar

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Beryl Feldspar Mica

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Chrysocolla-veined Feldspar

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Comparative flow testing of four feldspars

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Corundum On Feldspar

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Feldspar Sphere

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Feldspar W Hornblende

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Laboradite Feldspar

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Labradorite Feldspar

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Labradorite Gem Feldspar

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Orthoclase Feldspar Rock

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Tourmaline On Feldspar

XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<material name="Feldspar" descrip="" generic="1" rawmineral="0" searchkey="" loi="0.00">
<families>
<family name="Feldspar"/>
</families>
<oxides>
<oxide symbol="K2O" name="Potassium Oxide" status="U" percent="16.920" tolerance=""/>
<oxide symbol="Al2O3" name="Aluminum Oxide, Alumina" status="" percent="18.320" tolerance=""/>
<oxide symbol="SiO2" name="Silicon Dioxide, Silica" status="" percent="64.760" tolerance=""/>
</oxides>
<volatiles>
<volatile symbol="" name="" percent="0.500" tolerance=""/>
</volatiles>
<references>
<reference name="seealso" reason=""/>
<reference name="seealso" reason=""/>
<reference name="seealso" reason=""/>
<reference name="seealso" reason=""/>
<reference name="seealso" reason=""/>
<reference name="seealso" reason=""/>
</references>
<hazards>
<hazard name="Feldspar"/>
</hazards>
<suppliers>
<supplier name="Generic" country="" url="" label=""/>
</suppliers>
<notes>
<note>Feldspar powders are made from crushed crystalline rock containing a mixture of aluminum silicates of sodium and potassium (with minor amounts of lithium or calcium). They contain 10-15% alkali (K2O, Na2O) and melt well at medium to high temperatures and are an economic source of flux. Manufacturers do a good job of delivering such uniform and clean products when one considers that feldspar deposits vary widely in composition and contain iron particles and other impurities.
Generally high potash feldspars are employed in bodies and promote vitrification by forming a glassy phase that \'cements\' more refractory particles together and triggers the formation of mullite from clay mineral. In glazes it promotes melting at medium and high temperatures (feldspars are the primary ingredient in most high temperature raw glazes).
In glazes sodium feldspars are most common and used mainly as a source of alkalis. Since feldspars are mineral compounds of silica, alumina and fluxes; they are often viewed as \'natural frits\' and are among the relatively few insoluble sources of K2O, Na2O and Li2O. No other raw material is closer to being a complete glaze on its own than feldspar. Since feldspars contain a complex mix of oxides, ceramic chemistry calculations are needed to \'juggle\' a recipe to achieve the desired balance of fluxing oxides with alumina and silica.
Many feldspars begin to melt around 2100F (1150C) and make good glaze bases because they contribute alumina and silica in forms that participate well in the melt. Feldspars tend to work well in fast fire glazes because they remain relatively inert until the later stages of firing.
However, \'flux-saturated\' glazes with high feldspar contents tend to be chemically unbalanced and thus make poor metallic oxide bases for functional ware. In addition, high feldspar can contribute to a high surface tension in the glaze melt and this may lead to high bubble population (which produces milkiness in the fired matrix). Stoneware glazes using large amounts of feldspar as a flux often craze because high-expansion sodium and potassium predominate.
Strictly speaking, the term \'feldspar\' refers to a family of minerals with a specific crystalline presence. Theoretically feldspar appears in many different types classifiable by chemistry and crystal structure (eg. microcline, hyalophane, celsian, orthoclase, albite, oligoclase, andesine, labradorite, bytownite, anorthite). However, commercially available feldspars tend to predominate in one specific mineral kind with lesser amounts of another and traces of others.
Geologists see feldspar as a mineral and classify feldspars as mainly as albite, microcline, orthoclase and anorthite. However, technically minded ceramists tend to view feldspar as a \'warehouse of oxides\' rather than a mineral. For this reason other materials like cornwall stone and nepheline syenite, which have similar chemistry, are classified as feldspars by the ceramics industry.</note>
<note>Any of the aluminum silicate minerals containing alkalis and having very similar chemical structures, especially in their crystal geometry and ratio of alkali metal(s) to aluminum and silicon, and thereby known mineralogically as aluminosilicates. A further classification distinguishes two series of these aluminosilicates based on their continuums (as rock-making minerals) from sodium to potassium and from sodium to calcium, labeling the first series as &#147;alkali feldspars&#148; and the second series as
&#147;plagioclase feldspars&#148;.
As &#147;clays&#148; (i.e., as hydrous aluminosilicates) feldspars are distinguished by their relative purity of clay + alkali; free, for the most part, of any significant traces of the non-alkali metals or earths so common to other earths .
&#147;Feldspathic earth<B><I>s</I></B>&#148; are usually understood to be the rocks made up principally by feldspars and/or feldspathoids (such as gneisses, granites, magmas and pegmatites) available as natural deposits of decomposed rock or industrially packaged rock milled to varieties of grain-size powder. In the broadest sense, given that feldspars constitute more than 50% of the Earth&#146;s crust, most any earth is &#147;feldspathic&#148; even if containing only traces; so an earth &#151; especially w
ith respect to earths used in making up ceramic clays and glazes &#151; is normally considered feldspathic when the feldspar/feldspathoid content is sufficient to make a real difference one way or another in formulations. As pegmatites are the mother-rocks of feldspars, so are the feldspars the mother-rocks of kaolin and its similars.
<B>commonly used forms </B>(as often labeled commercially)<B>
</B>&#151; albite &#147;sodium feldspar&#148; Na<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT>, 6SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB>
</SUB>&#151; sanidine &#147;potassium feldspar&#148; K<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT>, 6SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB>
</SUB>&#151; nepheline &#147;sod-pot feldspar&#148; K<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O, 3Na<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O, 4Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT>, 8SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB>
</SUB>&#151; anorthite &#147;calcium feldspar&#148; CaO, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT>, 2SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB>
</SUB>&#151; labradorite &#147;sod-cal feldspar&#148; Na<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O, CaO, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT>, SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB>
</SUB>&#151; pegmatite (*) &#147;sod-pot-cal feldspar&#148; Na<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>/K<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O/CaO, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT>, 6SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB>
</SUB>&#151; spodumene &#147;lithium feldspar&#148; Li<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT>, 4SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB>
</SUB>&#151; celsian &#147;barium feldspar&#148; BaO, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT><SUB>, </SUB>2SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB>
</SUB>(*) Though pegmatites are &#147;<B><I>mother-racks</I></B>&#148; for feldspars, and not properly feldspars, recipes listing so-called &#145;sod-pot-cal feldspars&#146; are usually asking for pegmatites, such as Cornwall Stone, for example. As well, feldspathoids are often liberally labeled commercially as feldspars, or, more accurately, as feldspathics.
<B>typical comparative analyses
</B><I>potassium feldspar</I><B> </B>K<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O 16.89, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT> 18.43, SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT> 66.84<B>
</B><I>sodium feldspar</I><B> </B>Na<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O 11.82, Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT> 19.56, SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT> 68.82<B>
</B><I>calcium feldspar</I><B> </B>CaO 20.14. Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT> 36.70, SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT><SUB> </SUB>43.16<B>
</B><I>pegmatite (generic)</I><B> </B>K<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O 4.79, Na<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O 3.92, CaO 1.44, Fe<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT><SUB> </SUB>0.35,<SUB> </SUB>Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT><SUB> </SUB>15.11, SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT> 74.23<B>
</B><I>pegmatite (Cornwall) </I>K<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O 3.68, Na<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O 3.61, CaO 1.68, Fe<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT><SUB> </SUB>0.26,<SUB> </SUB>Al<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT>O<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>3</SUB></FONT><SUB> </SUB>17.37, SiO<FONT SIZE=2><SUB>2</SUB></FONT> 74.55
Feldspars are notoriously <B><I>short</I></B> clays, as natural clays go, which is to say that they are on the side of the less elastic clays, and subsequently are rarely used alone but rather in blends with more elastic clays to give them the manageability for a given need. So-called stoneware clays labeled exotically under names such as Rick\'s Mix, Helen\'s Biscuit, etcetera, are almost always blends of feldspars (for the benefits of more alkali and silicon) and &#147;earthenware&#148; clays (for handling
preferences prior to firing and for color after) and kaolin (for strength while firing and for color after). Feldspars usually fire to white, and many so-called white earthenware clays are in fact blends of common buff clays and large portions of feldspars and/or feldspathic clays. &#147;White translucent&#148; porcelain clays are typically blends of kaolin, feldspar and silica; the kaolin and the feldspar providing the whiteness; the feldspar and silica providing the translucency; and kaolin providing the
post to hold the vitrifying feldspar and silica upright during firing and until cooled.
At temperatures below 1190&ordm;C feldspars are strong refractories requiring strong mid- to low-temperature fluxing agents, such as zinc, lead and/or boron, to bring their silica to a melt. At temperatures over 1190&ordm;C the alkalis inherent to feldspars do the required fluxing, helped when and if needed by non-alkali fluxes and/or other alkalis not present in the particular feldspar(s) being used. Fusion temperatures for the great variety of feldspars are, all else being equal, directly determined by th
e type and proportion of alkalis present in relation to the silica present. Generally, potassium feldspars are the preferred forms to compose body pastes, and soda feldspars to compose glaze coverings; and, for both clays and glazes, the varieties of feldspars provide water-insoluble forms of the otherwise soluble alkalis which define the feldspars.
Magmatic/volcanic feldspars (analcime, etc.), feldspathoids (sodalite, etc.) and feldspathics (pumice, etc.), as Nature&#146;s <B><I>fritted feldspars</I></B>, equally provide water-insoluble forms of their alkalis but also forms which usually fuse at much lower temperatures than their granite-metamorphic complements. <FONT SIZE=2>see <B><I>alkali</I></B>,<B><I> calcinates</I></B>, <B><I>clay</I></B>, <B><I>glaze, rock</I></B>, <B><I>silicates</I></B>, <B><I>soil</I></B>, etc., as well as feldspars indivi
dually.</FONT>
</note>
</notes>
<pictures>
<picture description="Aquamarine On Feldspar" filename="aquamarine_on_feldspar.jpg"/>
<picture description="Augite Feldspar" filename="augite_feldspar.jpg"/>
<picture description="Beryl Feldspar Mica" filename="beryl_feldspar_mica.jpg"/>
<picture description="Chrysocolla-veined Feldspar" filename="chrysocolla-veined_feldspar.jpg"/>
<picture description="Comparative flow testing of four feldspars" filename="4feldspars.jpg"/>
<picture description="Corundum On Feldspar" filename="corundum_on_feldspar.jpg"/>
<picture description="Feldspar Sphere" filename="feldspar_sphere.jpg"/>
<picture description="Feldspar W Hornblende" filename="feldspar_w_hornblende.jpg"/>
<picture description="Laboradite Feldspar" filename="laboradite_feldspar.jpg"/>
<picture description="Labradorite Feldspar" filename="labradorite_feldspar.jpg"/>
<picture description="Labradorite Gem Feldspar" filename="labradorite_gem_feldspar_.jpg"/>
<picture description="Orthoclase Feldspar Rock" filename="orthoclase_feldspar_rock.jpg"/>
<picture description="Tourmaline On Feldspar" filename="tourmaline_on_feldspar.jpg"/>
</pictures>
</material>
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