List of inorganic pigments

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The following list includes commercially or artistically important inorganic pigments of natural and synthetic origin. The only dyes listed are derived directly from inorganic pigments.

Purple pigments

Aluminum pigments

Copper pigments:

Cobalt pigments:

Manganese pigments:

Blue pigments

Aluminum pigments:

Cobalt pigments:

  • Cobalt Blue (PB28) and Cerulean Blue (PB35): cobalt(II) stannate

Copper pigments:

  • Egyptian Blue: a synthetic pigment of calcium copper silicate (CaCuSi4O10). Thought to be the first synthetically produced pigment.
  • Han Blue: BaCuSi4O10

Iron pigments:

  • Prussian Blue (PB27): a synthetic pigment of ferric hexacyanoferrate (Fe7(CN)18). The dye Marking blue is made by mixing Prussian Blue and alcohol.

Manganese pigments:

Green pigments

Cadmium pigments:

  • Cadmium Green: a light green pigment consisting of a mixture of Cadmium Yellow (CdS) and Viridian (Cr2O3)

Chromium pigments:

  • Chrome green (PG17): chromic oxide (Cr2O3)
  • Viridian (PG18): a dark green pigment of hydrated chromic oxide (Cr2O3•H2O)

Copper pigments:

Yellow pigments

Arsenic pigments:

  • Orpiment natural monoclinic arsenic sulfide (As2S3),

Cadmium pigments:

Chromium pigments:

  • Chrome Yellow (PY34): natural pigment of plumbous chromate (PbCrO4).

Cobalt pigments:

  • Aureolin(also called Cobalt Yellow) (PY40): Potassium cobaltinitrite (Na3Co(NO2)6).

Iron Pigments:

  • Yellow Ochre (PY43): a naturally occurring clay of monohydrated ferric oxide (Fe2O3.H2O)

Lead pigments:

Titanium pigments:

Tin Pigments:

Orange pigments

Cadmium pigments:

Chromium pigments:

Red pigments

Cadmium pigments:

Iron oxide pigments:

Lead pigments:

Mercury pigments:

  • Vermilion (PR106): Synthetic and natural pigment: Occurs naturally in mineral cinnabar. Mercuric sulfide (HgS)

Brown pigments

Clay earth pigments (naturally formed iron oxides)

  • Raw Umber (PBr7): a natural clay pigment consisting of iron oxide, manganese oxide and aluminum oxide: Fe2O3 + MnO2 + nH2O + Si + AlO3. When calcined (heated) it is referred to as Burnt Umber and has more intense colors.
  • Raw Sienna (PBr7): a naturally occurring yellow-brown pigment from limonite clay. Used in art since prehistoric times.

Black pigments

Carbon pigments:

Iron Pigments:

  • Iron black (PBk11) (C.I. No.77499) : Fe3O4

Titanium pigments:

White pigments

Antimony pigments:

Barium pigments:

Lead pigments:

Titanium pigments:

Zinc pigments:

Safety

A number of pigments, especially traditional ones, contain heavy metals that are highly toxic. These pigments, including those derived from lead, mercury, have often been banned.[1]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Hugo Müller, Wolfgang Müller, Manfred Wehner, Heike Liewald "Artists' Colors" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 2002, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.a03_143.pub2
  2. Mn3+ in Trigonal Bipyramidal Coordination: A New Blue Chromophore. Andrew E. Smith, Hiroshi Mizoguchi, Kris Delaney, Nicola A. Spaldin, Arthur W. Sleight, and M. A. Subramanian J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2009, volume 131, pages 17084–17086, doi:10.1021/ja9080666