What is Feldspar?
Feldspar: A rock-forming mineral,
industrially important in glass and
ceramic industries, pottery and
enamelware, soaps, abrasives, bond for
abrasive wheels, cements and concretes,
insulating compositions, fertilizer,
poultry grit, tarred roofing materials,
and as a sizing (or filler) in textiles
and paper. Albite is feldspar mineral
and is a sodium aluminum silicate. This
form of feldspar is used as a glaze in
ceramics.
Feldspar History & General Information
Feldspar is the mineral name given to
a group of minerals distinguished by the
presence of aluminum (Al) and the
silicaion (SiO4) in their chemistry.
This group includes aluminum silicates
of soda (sodium oxide), potassium
(potassium oxide), or lime (calcium
oxide). Feldspar is the single most
abundant mineral group on Earth.
Together, the varieties of feldspar
account for one half of the Earth’s
crust. The minerals included in this
group are orthoclase, microcline, and
the plagioclase feldspars. They form in
a variety of thermal environments,
during the crystallization of liquid
rock (magma), by metamorphism of rocks
deep in the earth, and in sedimentary
processes.
Feldspars are relatively hard at 6 on
Mohs' hardness scale. Feldspars are
generally light-colored, including
white, pink, tan, green, or gray. The
color varies due to impurities within
the crystal structure. Feldspar is the
mineral that gives granite its pink,
green or gray color.
When feldspar weathers from igneous or
metamorphic rocks, it can accumulate as
sand. It is, however, easily weathered,
and eventually will break down into
clay.
The name feldspar is a contraction of
the longer name fieldspar, some early
specimens were found in fields. The term
spar is a generic term used by
geologists to refer to any non-metallic
mineral with a glassy (vitreous) luster
that breaks on distinct flat surfaces
(planes). The name was officially given
its name by Johan Gottschalk Wallerius
in 1747.
The word comes from the German "feldt
spat", meaning "field spar", "spar"
meaning common clevable material - the
material dredged up on farm lands during
plowing. Most of them are not affected
by acid (exception the Ca rich
plagioclase - Anorthite). Orthoclase got
is name from the Greek phrase meaning
"straight fracture", Microcline from a
Greek phrase meaning "small incline",
and Plagioclase from the Greek phrase
meaning "oblique fracture".
Orthoclase - when transparent it is
faceted into a gemstone. Clear or pale
yellow in color it is a collectors item,
and of little value to the jewelry
industry as both beryl and even citrene
are harder and more durable.
Microcline - variety amazonite, is
sometimes cut into cabochons, and used
in jewelry. The blue-green color is
caused by a lead impurity. It is rarely
used as more people are aware of
turquoise and chrysocolla.
Moonstone - moonstone can be made up of
any number of different feldspars
including, orthoclase, plagioclase,
albite, and microcline. They are all
very similar when cut into cabochons,
they can best be distinguished by their
different densities. Moonstone tends to
be silver, pale green, pale blue, or
creamy colored. It is translucent and
shows a blue-white sheen sometimes
called "adularescence".
Plagioclase - there are two distinct
varieties used in jewelry, the
dark-blue-black Labradorite, and the
orange-honey colored Sunstone.
• Labradorite gets its coloring from a "labradorescence",
reflected light from a multitude of
small parallel, plate-like structures,
with minute inclusions of ilmenite,
rutile, and magnetite. The color
patterns are similar in that shown in
nature with oil on water. It is rarely
faceted, but often cut into attractive
cabochons. Value is not really very high
as it has not caught on as a popular
material and is abundant.
• Sunstone is a species of plagioclase
called "oligoclase" or known sometimes
in the jewelry industry as "adventurine
feldspar". It gets is shiller in the
same way that labradorite does, but the
background color is brown to orange, and
the composition is full of small
hematite crystals that give it
additional sparkle.
The Present Scenario
Feldspar is used as bonding agent
along with magnesium oxide, magnesium
chloride and other synthetic glue in the
manufacture of abrasives, wheels, discs
and other shapes.
Feldspar comprises a group of minerals
containing potassium, sodium, calcium
and aluminium silicates. They are the
most common rock-forming minerals. The
common feldspar is potassium feldspar,
namely, orthoclase (K2O, Al2O3, 6SiO2).
Sodium feldspar is albite (Na2O, Al2O3,
6SiO2) and calcium feldspar is anorthite
(CaO, Al2O3, 2SiO2). A variety of
crossed, hatched, twinned orthoclase (to
be seen under the petrological
microscope only) is called microcline.
Sodium and calcium feldspars form an
somorphous mixture known as plagioclase
feldspars.
In between sodium and calcium, the other
feldspars of the plagioclase series are
oligoclase, andesine, labradorite and
bytownite. They are composed of suitable
proportions of sodium and calcium with
an increasing percentage of calcium
begining from mineral oligoclase to
bytownite, turning completely into
calcium feldspar (anorthite). A rock
containing only plagioclase feldspars is
called anorthosite.
The commercial feldspar is orthoclase.
The potassium molecule is replaced by
sodium to some extent and hence,
orthoclase feldspar usually contains a
small percentage of sodium. The
composition range of the commercial
feldspar varies within the limits of
potash, soda and upto oligoclase.
Potash and soda feldspar occur as
essential constituents of granite,
syenite and gneisses. However, workable
deposits are found in pegmatite veins
consisting mainly of feldspar,
quartz-feldspar veins and also occur
with mica pegmatites. Feldspar is of
widespread occurrence and is mined in
almost all countries.
Feldspar Sources
Feldspar is mined from large granite
bodies (called plutons by geologists),
from pegmatite (formed when the last
fluid stages of a crystallizing granite
becomes concentrated in small liquid and
vapor-rich pockets that allow the growth
of extremely large crystals), and from
sands composed mostly of feldspar.
Because feldspar is such a large
component of the Earth’s crust, it is
assumed that the supply of feldspar is
more than adequate to meet demand for a
very long time to come. It is so
abundant that geologists and economists
have not even compiled data on potential
deposits of feldspar for future
consumption. Present mines worldwide are
adequately meeting the need for raw
feldspar.
Feldsapr Specification
| Hardness |
6-6.5 |
| Color |
Orthoclase - usually light
colored white, pink, yellow, or
cream, and not transparent. The
gem variety is clear to pale
yellow, and some called "noble
orthoclase"
Microcline - white, pink, pale yellow,
or sometimes green-blue, and not
transparent. The green-blue variety is
called "amazonite"
Plagioclase - gray to grayish-white is
common, but may also be white, pink or
pale yellow. More semi-opaque than the
other feldspars on average, and contains
striations on some crystal faces or
cleavage surfaces. |
| Associated Minerals |
Quartz |
| Environment |
The feldspars make up the
major constituent of many
igneous and metamorphic rocks,
they form at medium to high
temperature and at some depth.
Microcline can form in granite
pegmatites and at lower
temperatures. |
| Best Field |
|
Feldspar Uses
Feldspar is generally used for three
purposes
• In making the body composition of
several types of procelain, china and
earthenware and also in the preparation
of glazes and enamel.
• As an important ingredient in the
glass sand batch.
• As a bonding agent in the manufacture
of bonded abrasives like wheels and
discs of garnet, corundum, emery etc.
The glass and ceramic industries are the
major consumers of feldspar and account
for 95% of the total consumption.
In ceramic bodies, the main vitrifying
(fluxing) agent is feldspar. The
majority of white ware bodies contain
good proportions of feldspar. It acts as
a flux. In the ceramic industry, the
flux is defined as that portion of the
body which develops glass phase. This is
provided mostly by feldspar. The amount
of flux in a ceramic body should be only
in such a proportion as to develop the
desired amount of vitrification. If
excess of flux is added, the fired body
becomes very glassy and consequently,
brittle.
Feldspar is used in varying proportions
in porcelain, china and earthenware.
Earthenware contains on an average
• 12% feldspar
• 25% ball clay
• 28% china-clay
• 35% quartz
This proportion of feldspar varies in different products like
• Wall tile -5%
• Floor tile -30%
• Statutory porcelain -50%
• Sanitary china and prodelain bodies -30%
In the glass industry also, potash
feldspar is used in varying proportions.
It may contain 10 to 15% of the batch.
Feldspar, in this industry, is valued
for two purposes, firstly, it acts as a
flux and secondly, for alumina content.
Alumina provides the resistance in glass
to impact, bendings, and thermal shock.
In ceramic bodies, potash feldspar is
preferred although soda feldspar works
as a good flux and can be satisfactorily
used in developing ceramic bodies.
Potash feldspar has p.c.e. value 10,
while soda feldspar has 8-9. Anorthite
(the calcium feldspar), though it
contains twice as much alumina as soda
and potash feldspars and also contains
lime which is an important ingredient of
glass, is not preferred in the glass
industry because it is more refractory (p.c.e.
12). Glass industry prefers to use
mainly orthoclase (potash feldspar)
because it tends the melt to clear glass
while albite (soda feldspar) tends the
melt to a translucent glass.
Feldspar is used as bonding agent along
with magnesium oxide, magnesium chloride
and other synthetic glue in the
manufacture of abrasives, wheels, discs
and other shapes. In the preparation of
glazes the fine powder of feldspar is
mixed with silica powder and a thin
slurry is made. The fired up goods are
dipped into the slurry and fired again.
This imparts glaze to the surface. Some
other ingredients are also added to the
slurry to impart glaze and lustre. Each
pottery factory has its own technique of
preparing slurry which is regarded as a
trade secret.
Feldspar is used to make dinnerware and
bathroom and building tiles. In ceramics
and glass production, feldspar is used
as a flux. A flux is a material that
lowers the melting temperature of
another material, in this case, glass.
Substitutes and Alternative Sources
Feldspar can be replaced by other
minerals and mineral mixtures of similar
physical properties. Minerals that could
be used to replace feldspar include
pyrophyllite, clays, talc, and
feldspar-silica (quartz) mixtures. The
abundance of feldspar will make these
substitutions unnecessary for the
foreseeable future.
Green Feldspar (variety Amazonite) with
quartz and albite.
From Pikes Peak region, Colorado
Recommended Filled of Application
| Kind of powder |
Talc |
Mica |
Kaolin |
Red Iron oxide |
Fluorine |
Dolomite |
Calcite |
Bentonite |
Barite |
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