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KAOLIN , a pure See also: white
See also: clay, know also as See also: china-clay, since it is an essential ingredient in the manufacture of china, or See also: porcelain
.
The word kaolin, formerly written by some authors caulin, is said to be a corruption of the See also: Chinese Kau-See also: ling, meaning " High See also: Ridge," the name of a See also: hill
See also: east of See also: King-te-chen, whence the earliest samples of the clay sent to
See also: Europe were obtained by the Pere d'Entrecolles, a French Jesuit missionary in China in the early See also: part of the 18th century
.
His specimens, examined in See also: Paris by R
.
A
.
Reaumur, showed that true porcelain, the composition of which had not previously been known in Europe, contained two essential ingredients, which came to be known —though it now appears incorrectly—as kaolin and petuntse, corresponding respectively to our china-See also: day and china-See also: stone
.
The kaolin confers plasticity on the paste and secures retention of
See also: form for the See also: ware when exposed to the heat of the kiln, whilst the petuntse gives the translucency so characteristic of porcelain
.
Some of the earliest discoveries of kaolin in Europe were at Aue, near See also: Schneeberg in See also: Saxony, and at St Yrieix, near See also: Limoges in See also: France
.
In See also: England it was discovered in See also: Cornwall about the See also: year 1750 by See also: William
See also: Cookworthy, of See also: Plymouth; and in 1768 he took out his patent for making porcelain from moorstone or growan (china-stone) and growan clay (kaolin), the latter imparting " whiteness and infusibility " to the china
.
These raw materials were found first at Tregonning Hill, near Breage, and afterwards at St See also: Stephen's in Brannel, near St Austell; and their See also: discovery led to the manufacture of hard paste, or true porcelain, at Plymouth and subsequently at See also: Bristol
.
Kaolin is a hydrous aluminium silicate, having the See also: formula H4Al2Si2O9, or Al2Si20r.2H20, but in See also: common clay this silicate is largely mixed with impurities
.
Certain See also: clays contain pearly white hexagonal scales, usually microscopic, referable to the See also: monoclinic See also: system, and having the chemical composition of kaolin
.
This crystalline substance was termed kaolinite by S
.
W . See also: Johnson and J
.
M
.
Blake in 1867, and it is now regarded as the basis of pure clay
.
The kaolinite of
See also: Amlwch in Anglesey has been studied by Allan See also: Dick
.
The origin of kaolin may be traced to the alteration of certain aluminous silicates like feldspar, scapolite, See also: beryl and See also: topaz; but all large deposits of china-clay are due to the decomposition of feldspar, generally in granite, but sometimes in See also: gneiss, pitchstone, &c
.
The turbidity of many feldspars is the result of partial " kaolinization," or alteration to kaolin
.
The china-clay rocks of Cornwall and See also: Devon are granites in which the See also: orthoclase has become kaolinized
.
These rocks are sometimes known as carclazite, a name proposed by J
.
H
.
See also: Collins from a typical locality, the Carclaze mine, near St Austell
.
It has often been supposed that the alteration of the granite has been effected mainly 'by meteoric agencies, the carbonic acid having decomposed the alkaline silicate of the feldspar, whilst the aluminous silicate assumes a hydrated condition and forms kaolin
.
In many cases, however, it seems likely that the change has been effected by subterranean agencies, probably by heated vapours carrying fluorineSee also: wad See also: boron, since minerals containing these elements, like See also: tourmaline, often occur in association with the china-clay
.
According to F
.
H
.
See also: Butler the kaolinization of the west of England granite may have been effected by a solution of carbonic acid at a high temperature, acting from below
.
The china-stone, or petuntse, is a granitic
See also: rock which still retains much of the unaltered feldspar, on which its fusibility depends
.
In See also: order to prepare kaolin for the market, the china-clay rock is broken up, and the clay washed out by means ofwater
.
The liquid containing the clay in See also: mechanical suspension is run into channels called " drags " where the coarser impurities subside, and whence it passes to another set of channels known as " micas," where the finer materials See also: settle down
.
Thus purified, the clay-See also: water is led into a series of pits or tanks, in which the finely divided clay is slowly deposited; and, after acquiring sufficient consistency, it is transferred to the drying-See also: house, or " dry," heated by flues, where the moisture is expelled, and the kaolin obtained as a soft white earthy substance
.
The clay has extensive application in the arts, being used not only in ceramic manufacture but in paper-making, See also: bleaching arid various chemical See also: industries
.
Under the See also: species "kaolinite " may be included several minerals which have received distinctive names, such as the Saxon See also: mineral called from its pearly lustre nacrite, a name originally given by A
.
Brongniart to a nacreous See also: mica; pholerite found chiefly in cracks of ironstone and named by J
.
Guillemin from the See also: Greek rboXis, a See also: scale; and lithomarge, the old •German Steinmark, a compact clay-like See also: body of white, yellow or red colour
.
Dr C . Hintze has pointed out that the word pholerite should properly be written pholidite (4oXis, oXiSos) . Closely related to kaolinite is the mineral called halloysite, a name given to it by P . See also: Berthier after his See also: uncle See also: Omalius d'Halloy, the Belgian geologist
.
(F
.
W
.
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