Institute for Cultural Heritage and History of Science and Technology, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing, China.
Department of the History of Science, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China.
Sci Rep. 2021 Feb 8;11(1):3316. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-82806-z.
Intricate ceramic bronze-casting moulds are among the most significant archaeological remains found at Bronze Age metallurgical workshops in China. Firing temperature was presumably one of the most important technical factors in mould making. However, it has proven difficult to determine the firing temperatures of excavated moulds using existing analytical methods. This study establishes an innovative new method for using Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) to estimate the firing temperature of clay-containing remains. The method is based on the finding that the infrared absorptivity of fired clay minerals, measured at the Si-O-Si stretching resonance band, is negatively correlated with firing temperature. Moulds and mould cores dating to the Early Shang period (sixteenth to fourteenth century BCE) are found to have been fired at extremely low temperatures-as low as 200-300 °C in many instances. These results provide critical new data for understanding the metallurgical technology of ancient China.
复杂的陶瓷青铜铸造模具是在中国青铜时代冶金作坊中发现的最重要的考古遗存之一。烧制温度大概是模具制作中最重要的技术因素之一。然而,使用现有的分析方法来确定出土模具的烧制温度一直很困难。本研究建立了一种使用傅里叶变换红外光谱(FTIR)来估计含粘土残留物烧制温度的创新方法。该方法基于以下发现:在 Si-O-Si 伸缩共振带测量的烧制粘土矿物的红外吸收率与烧制温度呈负相关。研究发现,早商时期(公元前十六至十四世纪)的模具和模芯烧制温度极低——在许多情况下低至 200-300°C。这些结果为了解中国古代冶金技术提供了重要的新数据。