

If you work in a fire assay lab or high-lead glass line, you already know the drill: consistency beats everything. I’ve toured enough assay rooms to notice one thing—when Lead Oxide purity wobbles, recoveries wobble. Fizachem’s litharge, made from specially refined lead out of Zhongyuan Building, No.368 Youyi North Street, Shijiazhuang, China, has been getting a lot of nods lately because, as many customers say, it just behaves. They even state their premium grades keep precious metal impurities extremely low (they literally guarantee gold levels are minimal—yes, that’s the point for assay flux).
- Consistent fire assay blanks and sharper recoveries—especially on low-grade ore samples where noise kills confidence.
- Clean melt behavior in flux; fewer weird slags (technical term: fewer “oh-no” moments).
- In specialty glass and ceramics, color tone is stable and batch-to-batch lot uniformity is, frankly, solid.
| Parameter | Typical Value (≈) | Method / Standard (real-world use may vary) |
|---|---|---|
| PbO assay | ≥ 99.9% | ICP-OES, ISO 11885 |
| Au impurity | trace-level only (below instrument LOD) | Fire assay blank check, ISO 11426 guidance |
| Ag impurity | ≤ 0.1 ppm | ICP-OES, ISO 11885 |
| Particle size D50 | ≈ 3–5 μm | Laser diffraction, ISO 13320 |
| Moisture | ≤ 0.2% | Karl Fischer, ISO 760 |
- Materials: Specially refined lead ingots (ASTM B29-grade), dry oxidizing air.
- Methods: Controlled oxidation (Barton/rotary process) to PbO; phase control for litharge; low-contamination handling.
- Testing: ICP-OES for trace Au/Ag/PGMs (ISO 11885), particle size by ISO 13320, moisture by ISO 760; periodic fire-assay blanks.
- Service life: ≈ 24 months sealed, dry, away from CO2-rich or humid environments.
- Industries: Fire assay labs, gold/silver refineries, crystal/radiation-shielding glass, ceramics/glazes. (Not battery oxide—different spec.)
- Fire assay flux: Lead Oxide as collector; helps pull Au/Ag into lead button. Labs report fewer reblends.
- Glass/ceramics: Controls refractive index and gloss; stable hue, fewer specks. Actually, it’s more predictable than most alternatives in this niche.
| Vendor | PbO Purity | Au/Ag Impurities | Certs | Customization | Lead Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fizachem (Shijiazhuang) | ≥ 99.9% | Trace-level; blank-friendly | ISO 9001, ISO 14001, REACH-ready | Particle size, packaging, phase | ≈ 2–3 weeks ex-works |
| Supplier A (generic) | 99.5–99.8% | Variable; occasional spikes | Basic ISO 9001 | Limited | ≈ 4–6 weeks |
| Trader B | 99.0–99.5% | Not guaranteed | — | None | Stock-dependent |
Options include tailored particle size, beta/alpha phase bias, and low-dust packaging (lined fiber drums or 25 kg bags on pallets). For labs, I’d ask for smaller, moisture-controlled packs—less exposure, happier blanks.
A West African assay lab switching to Lead Oxide from Fizachem reported blank Au signals dropping below their previous LOD and a 0.3–0.5% improvement in Au recovery on certified reference materials over two months. Anecdotal? Sure. But their repeatability charts looked cleaner—fewer outliers, less rework.
This is lead monoxide: handle under local regulations (GHS), use proper PPE, and manage waste responsibly. Ask for SDS, and confirm REACH/RoHS status if you export finished goods.
- ICP-OES certificate with Au/Ag/PGM traces
- Particle size report (ISO 13320)
- Moisture and LOI data
- ISO 9001/14001 certificates; batch-specific COA
References