HUAMEI CHUANGYUAN
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| INVESTMENT SECTOR
Industrial Ceramics
Talc powder is widely used in the ceramics industry and serves as a key material for enhancing the quality and performance of ceramic products. Its main component, magnesium silicate, provides unique advantages and plays a versatile role in various ceramic manufacturing processes.
I. Enhance Product Performance
Enhancing Mechanical Properties: In the production of everyday ceramics, adding a small amount of talc powder (typically around 15%) can significantly improve the toughness of products like tableware, making them more durable and reducing the risk of breakage during use. For architectural ceramics such as tiles and porcelain slabs, incorporating 40% to 80% talc powder can dramatically boost product strength while minimizing both thermal and moisture-induced expansion. This helps prevent cracking during use, ultimately extending the lifespan of these materials.
Optimizing Aesthetic Performance: Talc powder boasts high whiteness, significantly enhancing the whiteness of ceramics and resulting in products with a cleaner, brighter, and more radiant color. Its fine particles effectively fill the minute pores on the glaze surface, boosting its density and creating a smoother, more refined ceramic surface with superior glossiness. For instance, when talc powder is added to sanitary ceramic glazes, it markedly improves both the gloss and whiteness of the finished products, reduces pinholes, and enhances overall aesthetic appeal.
Enhancing thermal stability: This helps reduce the sintering temperature of ceramics, shorten the firing cycle, and save energy costs. At the same time, it improves the stability of ceramics under high-temperature conditions, preventing deformation and cracking—issues that often arise during firing or use due to temperature fluctuations. This is especially beneficial for industrial ceramics and high-frequency porcelain products, where thermal stability is critical.
II. Adaptable to Different Ceramic Categories
Daily-use ceramics: In addition to enhancing toughness and improving color, they also improve the plasticity of products during low-temperature pottery processing, help establish a suitable glaze structure, accelerate the firing cycle, minimize cooling cracks, and ultimately boost both product quality and production efficiency. These ceramics are widely used in the manufacture of tableware, tea sets, and more.
Architectural ceramics: In the production of tiles, exterior wall tiles, and more, effective control of thermal and moisture expansion ensures dimensional stability, making it ideal for manufacturing large-format tiles. This also enhances product strength and abrasion resistance, meeting the demands of long-term architectural decoration. Additionally, the wide range of color options allows these ceramics to perfectly complement diverse interior design styles.
Industrial ceramics and high-frequency porcelain: Adding a relatively high proportion of talc powder (over 50%) can significantly enhance the mechanical properties and insulating capabilities of the products, meeting the performance requirements for high-frequency insulation components in industrial fields such as electronics and electrical engineering. These materials are used to manufacture electrical porcelain, radio porcelain, and other similar products.
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PRODUCT ADVANTAGES
The company is committed to providing customers with cost-effective talcum powder products, talc masterbatches, and high-quality services.
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Product Quality Testing
Leading Intelligent Manufacturing Engine: Automated Ingredient Dispensing Line , Infrared Safety Monitoring , Energy Consumption Optimization Module
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Smart production line
Leading Intelligent Manufacturing Engine: Automated Ingredient Dispensing Line , Infrared Safety Monitoring , Energy Consumption Optimization Module
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Raw ore sourced internally
From mine to powder—craftsmanship across the entire chain. A complete production chain for talc products.
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Wide range of applications
Talc powder products are primarily used in fields such as plastics, rubber, cables, coatings-paints, wood finishes, papermaking, cosmetics, and ceramics.