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Pyrometric devices gauge heatwork (the combined effect of both time and temperature) when firing materials inside a kiln. It is important to note pyrometric devices do not measure temperature, but can report temperature equivalents. The intention of the device is to give visually communicate any activity within the ware. In principle, a pyrometric device relates the amount of heat work on ware to a measurable shrinkage or deformation of a regular shape. Care should be taken with the interpretation, as some naively assume they are a measure of temperature alone.
[edit] Types
[edit] HistoryArchaeologists working at Northern Song period (960 to 1127 AD) kiln sites in the Chinese provinces of Shaanxi and Shanxi have reported that pyrometric cones about five centimetres tall and made from loess were used to help control the firing of the kilns. In 1782, English potter and industrialist Josiah Wedgwood created accurately scaled pyrometric device, with details published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London in 1782 (Vol. LXXII, part 2). This led him to be elected a fellow of the Royal Society. The modern form of the pyrometric cone was developed by the German ceramics technologist Hermann Seger and first used to control the firing of porcelain wares at the Königliche Porzellanmanufaktur (Royal Porcelain Works) in Berlin, in 1886. Seger cones are to this day made by a small number of companies and the term is often used in Europe as a synonym for pyrometric cones. The Standard Pyrometric Cone Company was founded by Edward J. Orton, Jr. in 1896 to provide a calibrated, visual device to measure the amount of heat delivered to ceramic wares during firing. Following the death of Dr Orton in 1932, a charitable trust was established to ensure the continued operation of the company, for the benefit of the ceramic arts and industry. [edit] External links
[edit] References and Further Reading
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