Ancient Chinese Tea Bowls Hold Rare Iron Compound
Ancient Chinese tea bowls might hold
the recipe for a rare form of iron oxide that scientists have had a hard time
making in the lab.
Pure epsilon-phase iron oxide was
unexpectedly discovered in the glaze of silvery Jian bowls made 1,000 years
ago, a group of researchers announced this week.
Jian ceramic wares were created in
China's Fujian Province during the Song dynasty between A.D. 960 and 1279.
Today, examples can be found in museums like the Smithsonian's Freer and
Sackler galleries in Washington, D.C., and the Metropolitan Museum of Art
in New York. But Jian bowls even had international appeal back in their day:
They were highly valued in Japan, where they were used in tea ceremonies and
known as Yohen Tenmoku.
Beyond retaining heat (an important
quality for tea-drinkers), Jian vessels were famous for their dark, lustrous
glaze, which was often streaked with patterns likened to "hare's
fur," "oil spots" and "partridge spots." These
characteristic designs came from molten iron flux in the glaze, which flowed down
the sides of the bowls and crystallized into iron oxides while cooling in the
kiln, researchers say.
A team of scientists, led by
Catherine Dejoie of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab in California, wanted
to investigate the microstructure and local chemical composition of this type
of ancient pottery. They used X-ray diffraction and
electron microscopy techniques to analyze the tiny quirks on Jian pottery
fragments provided by the museum of the Fujian province. Hare's fur patterns on
Jian bowls, once thought to contain just the mineral hematite, were found to
have small quantities of epsilon-phase iron oxide, the scientists said. The
researchers also found that oil spot patterns, thought to be made of the
mineral magnetite, remarkably contain large quantities of pure epsilon-phase
iron oxide.
Though epsilon-phase iron oxide was
first identified 80 years ago, scientists have only managed to grow tiny
crystals of this material that are often contaminated with hematite. Scientists
think this type of iron oxide could hold the key to better, cheaper permanent
magnets used in electronics, because it has extremely persistent
magnetization, high resistance to corrosion and a lack of toxicity.
"The next step will be to
understand how it is possible to reproduce the quality of epsilon-phase iron
oxide with modern technology," Dejoie, a scientist at Berkley Lab's
Advanced Light Source and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich,
said in a statement. "And to identify and extract synthesis conditions and
other factors to obtain large crystals of pure epsilon phase."
The findings were published online
May 13 in the journal Scientific Reports.
Source of the story is here.
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