
If you’re sourcing high-gloss, weather-stable rutile TiO2 for coatings, inks, or outdoor polymers, you’ll keep hearing about CR-350 from Jindi Industrial Park, Dacheng County, Langfang City, Hebei Province. In buyer calls, people often map the spec they call Tio2 P90 to this grade because the chloride route and surface treatment combo hit that sweet spot: clean color, tight particle size, and long-term chalking resistance. To be honest, it’s the sort of “do-most-things-well” workhorse I like to see on shortlists.
CR-350 is a chlorination-process rutile titanium dioxide using advanced oxidation, inorganic coating (typically alumina/silica families), and a tailored organic treatment. In plain English: free-flowing powder, strong hiding, glossy films, and – surprisingly for a broad-usage grade – robust outdoor durability. Many customers say it disperses quicker than older sulphate grades, which tracks with the process physics.
| Parameter | Typical value (≈) | Method/Note |
|---|---|---|
| TiO2 content | ≥ 96.0% | ISO 591-1, chloride rutile |
| Rutile content | > 98% | XRD |
| CIE L (whiteness) | ≈ 98.2 | ISO 7724 |
| Oil absorption | 17–22 g/100 g | ISO 787-5 |
| pH (aqueous slurry) | 6.5–8.5 | ISO 787-9 |
| Volatiles at 105°C | ≤ 0.5% | ISO 787-2 |
Advantages I keep seeing: fast dispersion (less mill time), high gloss, and steady color in QUV. One customer told us their semi-gloss exterior tested to 1,000 h QUV with ΔE ≈ 1.2—solid for a mainstream grade.
| Grade | Process | Gloss/Weathering | Dispersion | Relative cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR-350 (Tio2 P90-class) | Chloride | High / High | Fast | Mid |
| Global Chloride Grade A | Chloride | Very high / Very high | Fast | High |
| Sulphate Grade B | Sulphate | Medium / Medium | Moderate | Low |
Surface treatment can be tuned for hydrophilic vs. hydrophobic systems; packaging in 25 kg bags or FIBCs; shade control in narrow b bands if you care about undertone matching. Testing support typically covers ISO 787 panels, gloss (60°), and QUV per ASTM G154. Certifications: REACH registration, RoHS compliance, and safety per SDS. It seems routine now, but still worth checking lot by lot.
A Southeast Asian coil-coating line swapped an older sulphate rutile to CR-350 (Tio2 P90-type target). Mill time dropped ≈12%, 60° gloss improved from 84 to 88, and after 2,000 h QUV (ASTM G154, Cycle 1) ΔE held under 2.0 with limited chalking. Not groundbreaking, but in a tight-cost market, that’s real money.
Bottom line: if you’re speccing a modern chloride rutile that balances cost with exterior holdout, Tio2 P90-class CR-350 deserves a sample run. Start with your binder system and push a quick dispersion curve; the gloss pops up fast when you hit the right grind energy.