Are abrasive fillers wearing your equipment away?

Are abrasive fillers wearing your equipment away?

Whew, there we thought that Loadshedding was our main challenge these days. Now we also have to worry about the weaker rand caused by the supplies-to-Russia scandal. Just another thing to test our resilience, I guess.

The other day a client complained that even though he had shopped around for a cheaper filler to save on costs, he never expected high wear on his machinery to eat a hole in his profits.

How can you tell if a filler is going to be abrasive or not? A good starting point is the?Mohs hardness?scale, which gives you an idea of the hardness of various minerals compared to each other.?Diamond?is the hardest mineral in the world, so of course it sits at number 10 on the hardness scale. Pure?talc?is the softest mineral at number 1.?

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Sand (or?silica/quartz) is very abrasive with a Mohs hardness of 7. Sometimes a mineral is just dug from the ground and milled along with the sand in the deposit. This pushes its abrasiveness sky high. So, the thing to remember is not all talcs are soft! The cheapest ones unfortunately are usually also the most abrasive because the least careful selection has gone into their production.?

With kaolin, abrasiveness also depends on how it has been processed.?Water-washed kaolin?sits at 2 on the Mohs hardness scale, just above pure talc. Water-washing removes most of the free?silica?(sand) that occurs as an impurity in kaolin deposits.?

However, a kaolin that has simply been mined and milled would have sand milled into it and be much more abrasive.

An easy way to check whether a particular kaolin is milled or water-washed, is to check the?silica?content on the data sheet. If it is above 60%, then it is a milled kaolin. Water-washed kaolin has around 47%?silica, close to the theoretical value for pure kaolin.

Another way to find out a mineral’s abrasiveness is to test it in the laboratory on an instrument such as the?Einlehner tester. Here are some abrasiveness results for various mineral fillers:


Water-washed kaolin: 35 g.m-2

Milled kaolin: 220 g.m-2

5μ calcium carbonate: 69 g.m-2

Bentonite: 187 g.m-2


Apart from?silica, some other extremely abrasive fillers that you may come across include?fly-ash?and?zeolite. These are so abrasive that they wear through parts of the abrasion tester!

With?calcium carbonate,?one can check whether it comes from a marble deposit or a limestone deposit. Marble is much harder than limestone, even though they are both the same mineral!

I guess the moral of the story is to get to know how your filler is produced, check its silica content, or have its abrasiveness tested.

Good luck out there.

Best regards,


Jenny Jay -?Managing Director

SERINA TRADING?

www.kaolin.co.za?

021-7852081

** kaolin * calcium carbonate * talc * reclaim rubber * crop stress products **


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MOHS HARDNESS COMPARISON CHART

How can you tell if a filler is going to be abrasive or not? The first point of reference is the Mohs Hardness scale.

Diamond is the hardest mineral in the world, so it sits at number 10 on the hardness scale. Pure talc is the softest mineral at number 1.

This table gives you an idea of the hardness of various minerals and fillers, compared to each other.

DOWNLOAD CHART

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