Black Pigments – Chemistry, Types, and Applications in Paints
1. Chemistry of Black Pigments
Carbon Black (C, amorphous): Produced by incomplete combustion of hydrocarbons (furnace black, channel black). Fine particle size gives deep jet-black tone.
Bone Black (Ca₅(PO₄)₃(OH) + C): Derived from calcined animal bones; contains carbon + calcium phosphate.
Iron Oxide Black (Fe₃O₄, magnetite): Inorganic pigment, stable, moderate tinting strength, good UV resistance.
Spinel Black Pigments (e.g., Co, Cr, Fe oxides in spinel structure): High stability, heat resistance, ceramic applications.
Manganese Black (Mn oxides): Used in special heat-resistant paints.
2. Types of Black Pigments
Pigment Type
Main Component
Properties
Notes
Carbon Black
Elemental carbon
High jetness, conductivity, tinting
Widely used in coatings, inks, plastics
Lamp Black
Carbon (soot origin)
Coarser than furnace black, bluish tone
Traditional pigment
Channel Black
Carbon (gas flame)
Very fine, high jetness
Expensive, now rare
Bone Black
Carbon + calcium phosphate
Dull black, warm undertone
Low-cost
Iron Oxide Black
Fe₃O₄
Durable, weather/UV resistant
Industrial paints
Mixed Metal Oxide Blacks
Fe, Mn, Co, Cr oxides
High-temperature stability, non-bleeding
Powder coatings, ceramics
3. Applications in Paints
Decorative Paints: Used in wall paints, enamels, and emulsions for deep black shades and tinting gray tones.
Automotive Paints: Carbon black gives jetness and gloss; iron oxide black for underbody coatings (better durability).
Industrial Coatings: Iron oxide and spinel blacks for anticorrosive primers, heat-resistant paints, coil coatings.
For heat-resistant & powder coatings → Shepherd Color spinel blacks, Ferro pigments.
For economical coatings in India → Sudarshan, Sona Pigments, Kolorjet.
Specialities of Channel Black
Channel black is a high-jetness carbon black historically produced by the channel process (burning natural gas on cooled iron channels). Although it has been largely replaced by furnace black for economic and environmental reasons, it still has unique properties valued in certain coating applications.
1. Particle Size & Structure
Extremely fine particle size (10–20 nm), smaller than typical furnace blacks.
High surface area → gives maximum jetness and bluish undertone.
Very low structure (fewer aggregates), allowing smooth, glossy films.
2. Coloristic Properties
Deep jet black with a bluish tone, superior to lamp black and iron oxide black.
High tinting strength → strong blackening effect even at low concentrations.
Excellent for producing high-gloss enamels and luxury black finishes.
3. Dispersion Behavior
Difficult to wet due to high surface area, but once dispersed properly, gives very fine, uniform color distribution.
Susceptible to flocculation if dispersion energy is inadequate.
4. Applications in Paints
Automotive coatings (historically used in enamels, lacquers) → high jetness blacks.
Printing inks → very intense black tone, high gloss.
Decorative coatings → luxurious deep black finishes.
Electronics & conductive coatings → specialty grades for conductivity.
5. Limitations
Production process was energy-intensive and polluting → most plants shut down globally.
Expensive compared to furnace black and lamp black.
Inferior weathering stability compared to iron oxide black.
✅ Specialty Today: Channel black is now produced in limited quantities, mainly for premium coatings, high-jet inks, and historical color matching where its unique bluish undertone and gloss cannot be duplicated by furnace blacks.