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Thursday, December 5, 2019

THE MINERAL TALC - Talc is a vital part of everyday life. Talc is the world's softest mineral. Talc is an effective anti-caking agent, dispersing agent and die lubricant and therefore helps animal feed and fertilizer plants to function more efficiently. In premixes and agricultural chemicals, it makes an ideal inert carrier. Talc also is used as an anti-stick coating agent in a number of popular foods including chewing gum, boiled sweets, cured meats, and for rice polishing. In olive oil production, as a processing aid, it increases yield and improves the clarity of the oil. Specialty talc can improve the performance of biological wastewater treatment plants. The talc particles ballast the flocs of bacteria and accelerate their sedimentation. The addition of talc results in top quality discharge and zero bacterial loss.

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What is Talc?
The Industrial Minerals Association




Talc is the world's softest mineral.
Although all talc ores are soft, platy, water repellent and chemically inert, no two talcs are quite the same. 
Talc is a vital part of everyday life. The magazines we read, the polymers in our cars and houses, the paints we use and the tiles we walk on are just some of the products that talc enhances.
Talc is a hydrated magnesium sheet silicate with the chemical formula Mg3Si4O10(OH)2.
The elementary sheet is composed of a layer of magnesium-oxygen/hydroxyl octahedra, sandwiched between two layers of siliconoxygen tetrahedra.
The main or basal surfaces of this elementary sheet do not contain hydroxyl groups or active ions, which explains talc's hydrophobicity and inertness.
Talc is practically insoluble in water and in weak acids and alkalis. It is neither explosive nor flammable.
Although it has very little chemical reactivity, talc does have a marked affinity for certain organic chemicals, i.e. it is organophilic.
Above 900°C, talc progressively loses its hydroxyl groups and above 1050°C, it re-crystallizes into different forms of enstatite (anhydrous magnesium silicate).
Talc's melting point is at 1500°C.
Morphology
The size of an individual talc platelet (= a few thousand elementary sheets) can vary from approximately 1 micron to over 100 microns depending on the deposit.
It is this individual platelet size that determines a talc's platyness or lamellarity. A highly lamellar talc has large individual platelets whereas a microcrystalline talc's platelets are much smaller.
The elementary sheets are stacked on top of one another, like flaky pastry, and, because the binding forces (known as Van der Waal's forces) linking one elementary sheet to its neighbors are very weak, the platelets slide apart at the slightest touch, giving talc its characteristic softness.
Related Minerals
Talc ores also differ according to their mineralogical composition (i.e. the type and proportion of associated minerals present).
They can be divided into two main types of deposits: talc-chlorite and talc-carbonate.
Talc-chlorite ore bodies consist mainly of talc (sometimes 100%) and chlorite, which is hydrated magnesium and aluminium silicate.
Chlorite is lamellar, soft and organophilic like talc. It is however more hydrophylic.
Talc-carbonate ore bodies are mainly composed of talc carbonate and traces of chlorite.
Carbonate is typically magnesite (magnesium carbonate) or dolomite (magnesium and calcium carbonate).
Talc - carbonate ores are processed to removed associated minerals and to produce pure talc concentrate.
Talc's properties (platyness, softness, hydro-phobicity, organophilicity, inertness and mineralogical composition) provide specific functions in many industries.
Agriculture and Food: Talc is an effective anti-caking agent, dispersing agent and die lubricant and therefore helps animal feed and fertilizer plants to function more efficiently.
In premixes and agricultural chemicals, it makes an ideal inert carrier.
Talc also is used as an anti-stick coating agent in a number of popular foods including chewing gum, boiled sweets, cured meats, and for rice polishing.
In olive oil production, as a processing aid, it increases yield and improves the clarity of the oil.
Ceramics: Talc is a phyllosilicate which imparts a wide range of functions to floor and wall tiles and sanitaryware, tableware, refractories and technical ceramics.
In traditional building ceramics (tiles and sanitaryware), it is used essentially as a flux, enabling firing temperatures and cycles to be reduced.
In refractory applications, chlorite-rich talc is transformed into cordierite to improve thermal shock resistance.
For steatite ceramics, talcs with a microcrystalline are the most appropriate. During firing, the talc is transformed into enstatite, which possesses electro-insulating properties.
As for very low iron content talcs, they are particularly suitable for use in frit, engobe and glaze compositions.
Coatings: Talc confers a whole range of benefits to coatings. In interior and exterior decorative paints, they act as extenders to improve hiding power and titanium dioxide efficiency.
Talc's lamellar platelets make paint easier to apply and improve cracking resistance and sagging. They also enhance matting.
In anti-corrosion primers, talc is used to improve corrosion resistance and paint adhesion. Talc also brings benefits to inks, jointing compounds, putties and adhesives.
Paper: Talc is used in both uncoated and coated rotogravure papers where it improves printability as well as reducing surface friction, giving substantial improvements in productivity at the paper mill and print house.
It also improves mattness and reduce ink scuff in offset papers.
Used as pitch control agents, talc "cleans" the paper making process by adsorbing any sticky resinous particles in the pulp onto their platy surfaces, thereby preventing the agglomeration and deposition of these on the felts and calenders. As opposed to chemical pitch-control products that pollute the process water, talc is removed together with the pulp, enabling the papermaker to operate more easily in closed-circuit.
In specialty papers such as colored papers or labels, talc helps to improve quality and productivity.
Personal Care: As it is soft to the touch and inert, talc has been valued for centuries as a body powder.
Today it also plays an important role in many cosmetic products, providing the silkiness in blushes, powder compacts and eye shadows, the transparency of foundations and the sheen of beauty creams.
In pharmaceuticals, talc is an ideal excipient, used as a glidant, lubricant and diluent. Soap manufacturers also use talc to enhance skin care performance.
Plastics: Talc imparts a variety of benefits to polypropylene, for instance higher stiffness and improved dimensional stability.
In automotive parts (under-the-hood, dashboard, bumper interiors and exterior trim), household appliances and white goods.
It requires advanced milling technology to obtain the finest talc without diminishing the reinforcing power of its lamellar structure.
Talc also is used for linear low density polyethylene (LLDPE) antiblocking and as a nucleating agent in semicrystalline polymers.
In polypropylene food packaging applications, talc is a highly effective reinforcing filler.
Rubber: Talc reduces the viscosity of rubber compounds, thereby facilitating the processing of moulded parts.
It also improves extrudate qualities, increasing production rates and enhancing UV radiation resistance of exterior parts such as automotive profiles.
In sealants and gaskets, they provide good compression resistance, while in pharmaceutical stoppers, they create a barrier against liquids.
In cables, talc functions as insulators and in tire manufacture it makes excellent processing aids.
Wastewater treatment: Specialty talc can improve the performance of biological wastewater treatment plants.
The talc particles ballast the flocs of bacteria and accelerate their sedimentation. The addition of talc results in top quality discharge and zero bacterial loss.
It can help to upgrade plants without resorting to costly plant expansions.
As opposed to most chemicals used to clean wastewater, such as chlorine or aluminium salts, talc is a natural, environmentally-friendly mineral additive.
And because it is inert, it preserves the fertilizing value of sewage sludge.

The Industrial Minerals Association - North America (IMA-NA) is the representative voice of companies which extract and process a vital and beneficial group of raw materials known as industrial minerals. Industrial minerals are the ingredients for many of the products used in everyday life, and our companies and the people they employ are proud of their industry and the socially responsible methods they use to deliver these beneficial resources.
IMA-NA represents ball clay, barite, bentonite, borates, calcium carbonate, diatomite, feldspar, industrial sand, kaolin, magnesia, soda ash, talc and wollastonite.
Industrial minerals . . . Your world is made of them!
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