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Titanium Dioxide – High Purity, R996 & Nano, Low Cost

Oct . 21, 2025 10:45 Back to list

Titanium Dioxide – High Purity, R996 & Nano, Low Cost

TITANIUM DIOXIDE R-996 FOR INDUSTRIAL USE TIO2: Field Notes, Specs, and Real-World Use

I spent a morning in Jindi Industrial Park, Dacheng County, Langfang City, Hebei Province—not the kind of place you stumble into by accident—to look at Titanium Dioxide R-996 batches headed for coatings and plastic lines. It’s industrial-grade only (to be absolutely clear: not for food or pharma), and it’s the sort of rutile pigment that quietly makes white look whiter and colors pop harder.

Titanium Dioxide – High Purity, R996 & Nano, Low Cost

What’s new in the TiO2 market (and what isn’t)

Demand in architectural coatings is steady; plastics masterbatch is still chasing dispersion and blue undertone. Energy costs and carbon accounting keep nudging buyers toward efficient grind times and high tint strength—because honestly, a lower let-down ratio saves more than a press release about “sustainability.” Many customers say R-996 grades give reliable hiding in PVC profiles and exterior paints without drama. I’ve seen that too.

Typical Technical Specifications (Rutile R-996)

Crystal form Rutile, surface-treated (Al2O3/SiO2, light organic finish)
TiO2 content ≈ 93–95% (real-world lots may vary)
Brightness (L) ≈ 97–98
Oil absorption ≈ 16–20 g/100 g
pH (aqueous slurry) 6.5–8.0
Specific gravity ≈ 4.1 g/cm³
Median particle size ≈ 0.25–0.35 μm
Moisture (105°C) ≤ 0.5%
Applications Industrial coatings, architectural paints, powder coatings, masterbatch, PVC profiles, sheets

Process Snapshot (Sulfate-route, simplified)

  • Materials: ilmenite/titanium slag, sulfuric acid, neutralizers; alumina/silica for surface treatment.
  • Methods: digestion → hydrolysis → calcination → micronization → surface treatment → drying → milling.
  • Testing: ISO 591-1 and ASTM D476 classification; ISO 787 methods; ISO 2813 gloss; ISO 7724 color; ISO 16474 weathering.
  • Service life: in exterior acrylics, around 5–10 years depending on binder, PVC, and UV; plastics vary with stabilizer package.
  • Industries: paints & coatings, plastics/construction, packaging; not for food/pharma (as stated).
Titanium Dioxide – High Purity, R996 & Nano, Low Cost

Where it shines (and why)

Titanium Dioxide R-996 offers high hiding power and a slightly blue undertone—useful for crisp whites and cooler tints. In plastics, fast dispersion shortens extruder time; in paints, you’ll often see lower scrub-loss and cleaner tint pastels. Many processors say they can shave 3–8% off TiO2 loading in select formulas without losing opacity. Your mileage, of course, depends on resin and grind.

Vendor comparison (indicative, lab panels; real-world use may vary)

Brand / Grade Tint strength (rel.) Blue undertone Dispersion time Indicative price
CQ R-996 (Hebei) ≈ 104–106% Cool Short Value
Global Brand A (R902-type) ≈ 100% Neutral Medium Premium
Regional Brand B (General rutile) ≈ 96–98% Slightly warm Long Economy

Customization and packaging

  • Surface treatment tuning: higher Al/Si for weatherability; organic finish for faster dispersion.
  • Target PSD for masterbatch vs. architectural coatings.
  • Moisture control for powder coatings.
  • Packs: 25 kg bags, 500–1000 kg FIBCs; palletized, shrink-wrapped.
Titanium Dioxide – High Purity, R996 & Nano, Low Cost

Two quick case notes

1) Exterior acrylic wall paint (semi-gloss): switching to Titanium Dioxide R-996 cut grind time by ≈ 12% and improved contrast ratio by 1–2 points at the same PVC. After 1,000 h QUV (ISO 16474-3), ΔE stayed under 1.5. Not bad.

2) White PP masterbatch (film): line speed up 6% at equal opacity with a slightly lower TiO2 loading (≈ –4%). Operators said pellets “felt cleaner” in the hopper—informal, but I’ve heard it before.

Compliance and safety notes

Factory typically operates under ISO 9001. Material is intended for coatings and plastics; not for food or pharma. Follow local regulations, dust control, and labeling; check EU CLP notes on certain TiO2 forms. Always validate to ISO/ASTM standards in your own lab—because, to be honest, every resin system has its quirks.

Origin

Jindi Industrial Park, Dacheng County, Langfang City, Hebei Province.

Citations

  1. ISO 591-1:2020 — Titanium dioxide pigments for paints — Part 1: Requirements and marking.
  2. ASTM D476 — Standard Classification for Titanium Dioxide Pigments.
  3. ISO 787 (series) — General methods of test for pigments and extenders.
  4. ISO 16474-3 — Paints and varnishes — Weathering by fluorescent UV lamps.
  5. ECHA, CLP/REACH guidance on TiO2 classification and labeling (Reg. (EU) 2020/217).

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