
A few months ago, I took the long road to Jindi Industrial Park in Dacheng County, Langfang, Hebei. Factory floors humming, technicians arguing (politely) over grind curves—real shop-floor energy. That’s where I first revisited titania tio2 designed specifically for latex coatings that don’t need premium weathering. To be honest, there’s a quiet renaissance happening here: cost-optimized, reliable pigments aimed at interior walls, primers, plastic masterbatch, pipes, rubber, and even leather facing paper.
Paint makers tell me two things: supply chain predictability and dispersion speed. Interior-grade titania tio2 has nudged toward consistent L brightness and clean tint undertone rather than exotic outdoor durability. Actually, that’s sensible—most interior walls won’t sit under UV for long years. So, factories in Hebei have leaned into stable anatase grades (sometimes blended) that wet out swiftly in waterborne systems and keep VOC audits simple.
| Parameter | Typical Value (≈) | Test Method |
|---|---|---|
| Crystal form | Anatase (interior grade) | ISO 591-1 Type A |
| TiO2 content | ≥ 94% | ISO 787-2 |
| Oil absorption | 22–26 g/100 g | ISO 787-5 |
| Average particle size (D50) | 0.25–0.35 μm | Laser diffraction |
| pH (aqueous slurry) | 6.5–8.0 | ISO 787-9 |
| Whiteness (L) | ≈ 97.5 | CIE Lab |
Materials: ore-derived TiO2 via sulfate route, surface-treated (often alumina/silica) to improve dispersion. Methods: pre-wet with a nonionic/anionic dispersant (0.2–0.6%), add to mill base at 1,200–1,800 rpm, then let the bead mill do its calm magic. Target Hegman ≥ 6.5. For QC: hiding power per ISO 6504-3, gloss per ASTM D523/ISO 2813, and volatile content per ISO 787-2. In an interior latex, service life is around 5–10 years (real-world use may vary) with low yellowing risk indoors.
Many customers say this titania tio2 feels “forgiving” in the mill: lower torque spikes, fewer foam headaches. I guess the surface treatment does the heavy lifting.
| Vendor | Grade Focus | Dispersion | Cost Position | Certifications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hebei supplier (Jindi Industrial Park) | Interior anatase, water-based paint | Fast, low foaming | Value-tier | ISO 9001, ISO 14001, REACH |
| Global Brand R | Rutile, high weathering | Excellent | Premium | ISO suite, REACH, RoHS |
| Budget Anatase B | General interior | Moderate | Low | Basic ISO |
Options include tuned particle size distribution, alumina/silica or zirconia surface coatings for extra scrub resistance, and defoamer-friendly wetting. Packaging is typically 25 kg paper bags or big bags. Traceability from Dacheng County is, frankly, tidy.
In a common interior matt (PVC ≈ 50%), I measured hiding power at ≈ 8.5 m²/L at contrast ratio 0.98, gloss 60° at 6–8 GU, and tint strength within ±2% batch-to-batch—nice. Customer feedback: “easy drawdown, low grit,” plus fewer filter clogs at 100 μm screens.
Case 1 — Interior Builder’s White: Swapped a mid-tier rutile for this titania tio2; achieved equal whiteness, shaved ~4% pigment cost, and cut dispersion time by ~12 minutes per batch.
Case 2 — PVC Primer: Primer line reported smoother atomization (HVLP) and cleaner edges on masking pull. Real savings came from fewer reworks; small changes, big mood.
Conforms to ISO 591-1 for classification; typical testing aligns with ISO 787 series. Coatings evaluation referenced ISO 6504-3 (hiding), ISO 2813/ASTM D523 (gloss). REACH pre-registration and RoHS statements available on request.
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