What is a Flux?

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What is a Flux?

To provide flux in the glaze, we need a material that contains one or more of the following:
Li2O=Lithium Oxide, comes from Lithium carbonate, Petalite, Spudomene
K2O=Potassium Oxide; comes from Potash Feldspar, frit
CaO=Calcium Oxide, comes from whiting, limestone, wollastonite (also provides SiO2), wood ash, bone ash, dolomite (also provides MgO)
MgO=Magnesium Oxide, comes from magnesium carbonate, dolomite (also provides CaO), talc
ZnO=Zinc Oxide, comes from zinc oxide
SrO=Strontium Oxide, comes from strontium carbonate
BaO=Barium Oxide, comes from barium carbonate
PbO=Lead Oxide (not used much due to toxicity)
Na2O=Sodium Oxide, comes from feldspar, FRIT, cryolite, nepheline syenite
TiO2=Titanium Dioxide, comes from pure titania, rutile
ZrO2=Zirconium Dioxide, comes from zirconium dioxide, zircopax, zirconium silicate
SnO2=Tin Oxide, comes from stannic oxide (SnO2 white), stannous oxide (SnO black)
B2O3=Boric Acid or Boron, comes from Colmanite, Gerstley Borate, CadyCal. Effective for lowering the melting point of a glaze.
If you've worked with glaze recipes at all, you probably recognize many of these terms, and can start to understand what they are used for.
You can take any glaze recipe, and break each ingredient down into its chemical composition as shown last week. An easy way to do this is by looking up the material in the DigitalFire database. DigitalFire database
Once you have the chemical composition of the ingredient, you can see what it contributes to the glaze. For example, is it primarily contributing silica, alumina, or a flux? Often a single ingredient contributes a combination of these. For example, Feldspar is primarily a combination of alumina and silica. And so is clay.

   

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