Abstract
Transparent pigments are characterized by very small particles with sizes in the range below 100 nm and large specific surface areas. Most of the technically relevant pigments consist of inorganic compounds. Transparent pigments are classified as nanomaterials. Nanosized primary particles do not or only slightly scatter visible light, which is the reason for their transparency. Pigmentation with these pigments leads to a transparent appearance of the application systems. There are colored and colorless transparent pigments. If colored pigments such as α-FeOOH, α-Fe2O3, and CoAl2O4 are used, the application medium takes on color while remaining transparent. Colorless transparent pigments are nearly invisible in the application system. Only in combination with effect pigments or conventional colored pigments, effects with a special appearance are possible, e.g., frost effects. There are two industrially relevant colorless transparent pigments, TiO2 and ZnO. Both pigments find their main applications as functional powders. They are characterized by strong UV absorption and are therefore applied as UV absorbers. As such, they are used for the protection of organic materials such as plastics and coatings. They are used in addition in a broad diversity of sun screen products where they protect human skin. The manufacture of transparent pigments takes place mostly using wet-chemical or gas-phase reactions.
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