%0 Journal Article %J Applied Physics A: Materials Science and Processing %D 2016 %T Characterization of the glaze and in-glaze pigments of the nineteenth-century relief tiles from the Pena National Palace, Sintra, Portugal %A Coutinho, M.L.a b c %A Veiga, J.P.d %A Alves, L.C.e %A Mirão, J.f %A Dias, L.f %A Lima, A.M.b c %A Muralha, V.S.c %A Macedo, M.F.b c %I Springer Verlag %K Analytical approach %K Buildings %K Ceramic pigment %K Chemical compositions %K Cobalt %K Cobalt compounds %K Complex mixture %K Different proportions %K Glazes %K Iron oxides %K Manganese %K Manganese oxide %K Manufacture %K Manufacturing techniques %K Micro-structural characterization %K Mixtures %K Oxides %K Pigments %K Production techniques %K Tin %R 10.1007/s00339-016-0214-5 %U https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84976285883&doi=10.1007%2fs00339-016-0214-5&partnerID=40&md5=79e426beb08fa88b4f8c9cae9db8b9ee %V 122 %X The glaze and in-glaze pigments of the historical nineteenth-century glazed tiles from the Pena National Palace (Sintra, Portugal) were characterized using a multi-analytical approach. Chemical composition and microstructural characterization were ascertained by µ-PIXE, µ-Raman, optical microscopy and VP-SEM–EDS. The manufacturing technique and colour palette in these tiles were found to be close to the ceramic pigments used in traditional majolica. The blue and purple colours derive from cobalt oxide and manganese oxide, respectively. A mixture of Pb–Sn–Sb yellow with cobalt oxide and iron oxide was used for green and dark yellow, respectively, while grey tonalities consist of a complex mixture of cobalt oxide, manganese oxide and Pb–Sn–Sb yellow in different proportions. Results obtained allowed the determination of the oxides and elements used in pigments as well as production techniques, resorting to traditional majolica manufacture, although the tiles were produced by the end of the nineteenth century. © 2016, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. %Z cited By 0