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325 West 38th Street Suite 503
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New York, NY 10018  |
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USA  |
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Phone: 212 868-7207 |
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Fax: 212 868-7208  |
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sales@micasales.com  |
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Established in 1951 in New York City |
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Wholesale and retail sales of mica and mica products, including mica splittings, block mica, mica flakes, phlogopite mica, mica gaskets, mica washers, and other mica products |
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Custom Orders: mica sheet cut to your precise product specifications
please inquire |
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Wholesale and retail sales of vegetable tannin extracts, synthetic and
natural industrial diamonds, gemstones, and other minerals and mineral products |
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Custom Orders of Any mineral and mineral product
please inquire |
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Shop around and compare prices, then come to Paramount and save |
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We love our customers (and our customers love us - we've had some of the same customers for over thirty years) |
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Block Mica Block mica, also known as mica block, consists of sorted blocks of
mica with an area of 1 sq. in. to 14 sq. in. or higher. The minimum thickness of block mica
is 7 mils. Block mica is an important form of mica for
industrial applications, including electrical applications. Block mica
is available in natural form or split and cut into sizes and shapes specified
by the customer. Mica blocks can be classified into many different
categories, depending on the extent of staining and other factors. The average sheet thickness of mica blocks varies from 7 up to 16 mils or higher.
All holes, cracks, and cross-grains are removed from mica blocks by hand.
Block mica is classified based on the amount of visual inclusions; a lower
degree of visual defects tends to increase the quality of mica blocks.
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Mica Thins Mica thins consist of mica blocks that have been dressed to a thickness
of 2 to 7 mils. Fabricated mica is made from these mica thins for the
electrical and other industries.
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Mica Films Mica films consist of mica blocks dressed to a thickness of 0.8 to 4 mils.
Mica films are generally made from high-quality block mica. Mica condensor
films, with a thickness usually less than 2 mils, are used in the manufacture
of mica capacitors.
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Mica Splittings Mica splittings consist of layers split from mica blocks.
Mica splittings are suitable for the manufacture of built-up mica
The thickness of ten sheets of mica splittings is not greater than 12 mils. Mica splittings are generally processed manually with sharp knives to the required thickness. Mica splittings have superior electrical qualities, such as high dielectric strength, and also have excellent mechanical strength. Mica splittings are used to make Micanite and related products. Mica splittings are classified into
three forms: loose form mica splittings, book-form mica splittings, and
wrapper mica splittings. Book-form mica splittings consists of individual books
of mica from the same mica blocks or mica thins. Each book of book-form mica splittings can contain from four to ten sheets of mica. Loose mica splittings
consist of mica splittings of irregular shape and size that are supplied loosely.
Book-form splittings are dusted with mica powder, while loose form mica splittings may or may not be dusted.
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Mica Flakes Mica flakes consist of high-quality mica scrap that is ground to a size of 2 to 30 mesh. A crushing and sieving process is used to make mica flakes. Many industries use mica flakes as additives and fillers.
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Mica Powder Mica powder is available in a wide range of mesh sizes. Both wet-ground
and dry-ground mica powder is available. As with mica flakes, mica powder
is used as additives and fillers by many industries.
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Fabricated Mica Products
We supply a wide range of fabricated mica products, including mica washers, mica
cut gaskets, mica for liquid level indicators, cut mica disks, rolled mica tubes,
mica condenser plates, mica tapes, mica segments, mica V-rings, mica cones, mica bushings,
mica paper, flexible glass mica sheets, flexible and press micanite sheets, and other fabricated mica products. If you need a fabricated mica product that is not
listed here, we'll get it for you! We will custom cut, punch, and machine mica to your exact drawings and specifications. please inquire
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Mica, occurring as muscovite and phlogopite, is world-renowned for its high-temperature, electrical, mechanical, and optical properties.
No other mineral has this combination of properties. Mica also has
decorative and filler applications. Muscovite mica is a basic potassium
aluminum silicate. Phlogopite mica is a basic potassium magnesium
aluminum silicate. Phlogopite is usually darker than muscovite. Both
phlogopite and muscovite occur as thin, tough, flexible, very elastic
flakes. Phlogopite often contains star-like structures when viewed in
thin sheets. Mica, both muscovite and phlogopite, is a mineral with
many important industrial applications.
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North America shows the remnants of the most ancient and extensive
mica mines in the world, although the original uses of mica in
North America are still unknown. One of the earliest known uses of
mica was in Ancient Rome, where mica was used as glitter on the
floor of Circus Maximus. In the Middle Ages in the Muscovy province
of Russia, mica was used as window panes and became known as
Muscovy glass. Muscovite mica derives from this usage of Muscovy
glass. Mica was also used as windows in the 1600's in Philadelphia,
where glass was a luxury. Mica has been used as windows for iron
stoves for two centuries due to its high melting point and transparent
qualities. An entire industry of mining stove-quality mica was built
up in the mid-1800's. Mica is still used as stove windows to this day.
Other uses of mica in the 1800's included shades for open-flame lamps
and peep-hole covers for furnaces. Coarsely ground mica was used
during this period as a roofing material, and finely ground mica was
used as a lubricant. Another early use of mica was in India, where
mica was used for miniature paintings and as female adornments.
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Heater mica plate and flexible mica plate, made with mica and a heat-
resistant adhesive, is commonly used as a heat shield in electric irons,
hair dryers, and many other heating appliances due to its high heat
reflection and heat resistance. In heater applications, electrical wire is
wound around a mica backing. Mica is fire-proof and nonflammable
and can resist temperatures of 600°C to 900°C, depending on the type of mica. Also, mica has a low heat conductivity and excellent thermal
stability. Very few minerals have the outstanding thermal properties of mica.
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Mica has many applications in the electrical industry due to its high
dielectric strength, uniform dielectric constant/capacitance stability,
low power loss (high Q factor), and high electrical resistivity. The
electrical properties of mica make it a unique mineral. Muscovite
mica has greater dielectric strength than any other insulating material,
surpassing all mica in dielectric strength, thermal endurance, and other
properties. For this reason, muscovite mica is considered the best
mica for electrical and electronics devices. Muscovite mica is not
sensitive to atmospheric weathering and offers higher resistance to
external chemical effects. Phologopite mica is softer than Muscovite
mica and this makes it more suitable for manufacturing commutator
micanite used in commutators of flush running devices.
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One of the important uses of mica in the electrical industry is in the
construction of mica capacitors. The dielectric material used in the
production of mica paper capacitors is reconstituted mica paper that
is impregnated with a polymer resin. Capacitor grade reconstituted
mica paper is made from natural muscovite mica; such mica paper
does not contain binders, adhesives, foreign matter, or colorants. Mica
paper consists of flexible, uniform layers of mica that are reformed
into paper-like electrical insulating material. Dipped mica capacitors
are made from fine ruby muscovite mica. which has some of the best
physical properties of mica and results in a capacitor with high
temperature reliability and high stability. These capacitors are made
with a number of silvered mica films stacked together to form a
capacitor section; the electrodes are silver, which is applied to the
mica by a screening process. Dipped mica capacitors exhibit extreme temperature coefficient limits. Chip mica capacitors, made by a special
lamination method which uses no metal foils, have radio-frequency
and microwave applications. Mica has many other uses in the electrical
industry, including radio tube mica spacers, thermostat insulators,
mica fuse windows, transformer layer insulation, mica washers for
transistor insulation and many other insulation applications.
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In addition to its many uses in the electrical industry, mica has many
applications as additives and fillers in several other industries. Mica
paint, made by adding powdered mica to paint formulations, is more
durable and provides an attractive pearlescent finish, particularly to
automobiles. Mica flakes are used in exterior paints to reduce running
and enhance weatherability. The use of mica paint dates back to the late 1800's. Mica has many applications in the plastics industry. Mica
and other minerals have low thermal expansion and have been used in
formulating plastics to reduce thermal expansion. Toughness, heat
resistance and other physical, thermal or electrical properties can be
greatly enhanced by melt-compounding various functional fillers such
as mica with thermoplastics. The use of inert fillers or extenders,
including mica, to make certain plastics reduces production costs by
decreasing the amount of plastics used. In addition, the use of mica as
a plastics filler can increase flexural strength and reduce warpage and
shrinkage. Mica is also used in plastic products as diverse as bowling
balls. Certain types of rubber use mica as a filler. Powdered mica is
added to certain greases to make them heavier and improve consistency.
Mica is also used to enhance oil well drilling muds.
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In addition, mica has decorative and cosmetics applications. Due to its
low toxicity and absence of taste, mica is used in the base formulation
of certain cosmetics. Mica lamps, first made in the early 1900's,
produce a warm, glowing translucence. Built-up mica plate has been
used as a decorative product for many years; mica flakes combined
with the contrasting colors and tones of binding resins create a unique
lighting effect. The main use of such mica has been in lampshades and
ceiling panels. In the paper industry, mica is used in making wall paper
and coated paper.
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