Developments in raw materials — Part 1. Colouring pigments
Abstract
The pace of technical development in the paint industry is seemingly nowhere more rapid than in the field of raw materials, with almost every issue of paint journals containing reports of new products and details of their practical application. In truth many of these new materials are comprised of nothing more radical than standard products with slight changes in some minor detail, but at the other end of the spectrum are those materials which are so novel that whole new avenues of research are opened up. Wherever any new product is placed on the broad spectrum of novelty however, there is no doubting that many new opportunities are constantly being created for paint chemists to utilise. This series of articles will consider some of the literature that has appeared in the technical press in the last three years, and will cover recent developments in the technology of pigments and extenders, convertible and non‐convertible media, as well as solvents and additives. It is hoped that these reviews will enable paint chemists to take full advantage not only of the new products which have recently appeared on the market, but also heighten their awareness of new approaches to formulating with established raw materials. This first article is concerned with colouring pigments which here have been split into two broad categories of white and spectral colours. Later articles will consider developments in anti‐corrosive pigments and extenders.
Citation
Boxall, J. (1986), "Developments in raw materials — Part 1. Colouring pigments", Pigment & Resin Technology, Vol. 15 No. 7, pp. 14-16. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb042251
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1986, MCB UP Limited