
If you’ve been shopping around for B-series rutile pigments, you’ve likely bumped into Titanium Dioxide B101—a workhorse white that, in real-world production, behaves a lot like the well-known R-6628 coming out of Jindi Industrial Park, Dacheng County, Langfang City, Hebei Province. To be honest, what most buyers care about is simple: stable whiteness, easy dispersion, durable film performance, and predictable cost-in-use. This grade ticks those boxes more often than not.
Formulators want higher hiding at lower PVC, faster dispersion to cut cycle times, and coatings that hold color under nasty UV and humidity. In plastics, recyclate content is rising, so pigment must mask substrate variability. Meanwhile, procurement teams are asking for REACH-friendly, low-impurity, multi-purpose grades. Honestly, Titanium Dioxide B101 sits in that pragmatic middle ground—good enough for premium architectural and robust enough for general plastics and inks.
This rutile pigment uses Zr/Al plus an organic post-treatment for weatherability and flow. Particle size distribution is intentionally tight to balance hiding with gloss—yes, that classic trade-off.
| Crystal form | Rutile | ISO 591-1 R2 |
| TiO2 content | ≈ 93–94.5% | ASTM D476 |
| Surface treatment | ZrO2 / Al2O3 + organic | Manufacturer QC |
| Oil absorption | ≈ 16–22 g/100 g | ISO 787-5 |
| pH (aqueous slurry) | 6.5–8.5 | ISO 787-9 |
| Residue 45 μm | ≤ 0.02% | ISO 787-7 |
| Volatile at 105°C | ≤ 0.5% | ISO 787-2 |
| CIE L | ≥ 97 (≈) | ISO 7724 |
| Median size (D50) | ≈ 0.25–0.32 μm | Laser PSD |
| Weatherability | High; ΔE | ASTM G154 |
Process flow (simplified): selected ilmenite/rutile feedstock → sulfate/chloride conversion (site-dependent) → hydrolysis/oxidation → calcination → milling and classification → Zr/Al inorganic coating → organic treatment → QC (whiteness, tint strength, residue, dispersion) → packaging. Service life in exterior acrylics: around 5–8 years to first repaint in temperate climates, assuming sane formulation and film build.
| Vendor | Origin | 60° Gloss (PU, ≈) | Tint strength vs. standard | Notes |
| Titanium Dioxide B101-class (R-6628) | Hebei, China | 88–92 | 100–102% | Good weatherability; easy dispersion |
| Regional Supplier B | SEA | 85–89 | 98–100% | Budget choice; softer tint |
| Premium Import C | EU/US | 90–94 | 101–104% | Higher price; top weathering |
Customization: surface-treatment balance can be tuned for faster wet-in (inks) or higher chalk resistance (exterior coatings). Packaging options typically include 25 kg bags and 1 t super sacks. Certifications usually available: ISO 9001/14001, REACH registration, and RoHS statements.
A mid-size SE Asian paint maker swapped their legacy rutile for Titanium Dioxide B101 in a 100% acrylic exterior matte. Dosage dropped by ≈6% with equal opacity; CIE L rose +0.6; scrub resistance improved 18% (ASTM D2486). Accelerated QUV (1,000 h, ASTM G154) showed ΔE 1.2 versus 1.8 for their control. They told me, “surprisingly, dispersion time fell by about 12 minutes per batch”—small change, big throughput.
Final checks I recommend: run ISO 7724 color, 60° gloss, hiding over black/white charts, viscosity stability at 40°C, and—if for plastic—yellowness index after multiple extrusions. It seems basic, but many customers say these quick screens save headaches later.