| Titanium dioxide |
|---|
_oxide.jpg) Titanium(IV) oxide
 The unit cell of rutile |
| Chemical name | Titanium dioxide Titanium(IV) oxide |
| Other names | Titania Rutile Anatase Brookite |
| Chemical formula | TiO2 |
| Molecular mass | 79.87 g/mol |
| Appearance | White solid |
| CAS number | [13463-67-7] |
| HS number | Titanium oxides: 2823.00 2823.00.10.000(''anatase'') 2823.00.90.000(''others'') |
| Properties | |
|---|---|
| Density | 4.23 g/cm3 |
| Bulk Density | 0.85 g/cm3 |
| Melting point | 1870 °C (3398 °F) |
| Boiling point | 2972 °C (5381.6 °F) |
| Dielectric Constant εr | 80-110 |
| Heat Capacity | 298.13 J/(mol °C) |
| Heat Conductivity | 6.531 W/(m K) |
| Lin. Coeff. Therm Exp. | 8.19 °C<-1 |
| Elastic Module | 244 GPa |
| Bulk modulus | Rutile: 210 GPa[1] |
| Hardness | 5-6.5 Mohs |
| El. Resistivity | 3 ★ 105 Ω @ 773 K |
| Ref. Index(ng,nm,np) | Rutile: 2.9467,-,2.6506 α-rutile: 2.908,-,2.621 Anatase: 2.5688,-,2.6584 γ-anatase: 2.448,-,2.261 Brookite: 2.809,-,2.677 α-brookite: 2.7004,2.5843,2.5831 |
| Solubility | Insoluble |
| Thermodynamic data |
|---|
Δf''H''ogas | −249 kJ/mol |
ΔfHoliquid | −879 kJ/mol |
ΔfHosolid | −944 kJ/mol |
Sosolid | 51 J/mol·K |
| Hazards |
|---|
| MSDS | External MSDS |
| EU classification | not listed |
| NFPA 704 | |
| Flash point | non-flammable |
| RTECS number | XR2775000 |
| Supplementary data page |
|---|
Structure and properties | ''n'', εr, etc. |
Thermodynamic data | Phase behaviour Solid, liquid, gas |
| Spectral data | UV, IR, NMR, MS |
| Related compounds |
|---|
| Other cations | Titanium(II) oxide Titanium(III) oxide Titanium(III,IV) oxide Zirconium dioxide Hafnium dioxide |
| |
'Titanium dioxide', also known as 'titanium(IV) oxide' or 'titania', is the naturally occurring
oxide of
titanium, chemical formula
TiO2. When used as a
pigment, it is called 'titanium white', 'Pigment White 6', or '
CI 77891'. It is noteworthy for its wide range of applications, from paint to sunscreen to
food colouring.
Natural occurrence
Titanium dioxide occurs in four forms:
★
rutile, a
tetragonal mineral usually of prismatic habit, often twinned;
★
anatase or octahedrite, a tetragonal mineral of dipyramidal habit;
★
brookite, an
orthorhombic mineral. Both anatase and brookite are relatively rare minerals;
★
Titanium dioxide (B) or TiO
2(B), a
monoclinic mineral.
Titanium dioxide occurrences in nature are never pure; it is found with contaminant metals such as
iron. The oxides can be mined and serve as a source for commercial
titanium. The metal can also be mined from other minerals such as
ilmenite or
leucoxene ores, or one of the purest forms,
rutile beach sand.
Production
Crude titanium dioxide is purified via
titanium tetrachloride in the
Chloride process. In this process, the crude ore (containing at least 90 % TiO
2) is reduced with
carbon, oxidized with
chlorine to give
titanium tetrachloride. This titanium tetrachloride is distilled, and re-oxidized with
oxygen to give pure titanium dioxide.
[2]
Applications
Titanium dioxide is the most widely used white pigment because of its brightness and very high
refractive index (''n''=2.4), in which it is surpassed only by a
few other materials. When deposited as a thin film, its refractive index and colour make it an excellent reflective optical coating for
dielectric mirrors and some
gemstones, for example "mystic fire
topaz". TiO
2 is also an effective
opacifier in powder form, where it is employed as a pigment to provide whiteness and
opacity to products such as
paints,
coatings,
plastics,
papers,
inks,
foods,
medicines (i.e. pills and tablets) as well as most
toothpastes. Used as a white
food colouring, it has
E number E171. In
cosmetic and
skin care products, titanium dioxide is used both as a pigment and a
thickener. It is also used as a
tattoo pigment and
styptic pencils.
This pigment is used extensively in plastics and other applications for its UV resistant properties where it acts as a UV reflector.
In
ceramic glazes titanium dioxide acts as an opacifier and seeds
crystal formation. In almost every
sunscreen with a physical blocker, titanium dioxide is found both because of its refractive index and its resistance to discolouration under
ultraviolet light. This advantage enhances its stability and ability to protect the skin from ultraviolet light. Sunscreens designed for infants or people with sensitive skin are often based on titanium dioxide and/or
zinc oxide, as these mineral UV blockers are less likely to cause skin irritation than chemical UV
absorber ingredients, such as
avobenzone.
Titanium oxide is also used as a semi-conductor.
[3]
As a photocatalyst
Titanium dioxide, particularly in the anatase form, is a
photocatalyst under ultraviolet light. Recently it has been found that titanium dioxide, when spiked with nitrogen ions, is also a photocatalyst under visible light. The strong
oxidative potential of the
positive holes oxidizes
water to create
hydroxyl radicals. It can also oxidize oxygen or organic materials directly. Titanium dioxide is thus added to paints, cements, windows, tiles, or other products for sterilizing, deodorizing and anti-fouling properties and is also used as a
hydrolysis catalyst. It is also used in the
Graetzel cell, a type of chemical solar cell.
Titanium dioxide has potential for use in energy production: as a photocatalyst, it can:
# carry out
hydrolysis, i.e., break water into hydrogen and oxygen. Were the hydrogen collected, it could be used as a fuel. The efficiency of this process can be greatly improved by doping the oxide with carbon, as described in "Carbon-doped titanium dioxide is an effective photocatalyst"
[1].
# produce electricity when in nanoparticle form. Research suggests that by using these nanoparticles to form the pixels of a screen, they generate electricity when transparent and under the influence of light. If subjected to electricity on the other hand, the nanoparticles blacken, forming the basic characteristics of a LCD screen. According to creator Zoran Radivojevic, Nokia has already built a functional 200 by 200 pixels monochromatic screen which is energetically self-sufficient.
As TiO
2 is exposed to UV light, it becomes increasingly
hydrophilic; thus, it can be used for
anti-fogging coatings or self-cleaning windows. TiO
2 incorporated into outdoor building materials, such as paving stones in
noxer blocks, can substantially reduce concentrations of airborne pollutants such as
volatile organic compounds and
nitrogen oxides.
For wastewater remediation
TiO
2 offers great potential as an industrial technology for detoxification or
remediation of
wastewater due to several factors.
# The process occurs under ambient conditions.
# The formation of photocyclized intermediate products, unlike direct
photolysis techniques, is avoided.
# Oxidation of the substrates to CO
2 is complete.
# The photocatalyst is inexpensive and has a high turnover.
# TiO
2 can be supported on suitable reactor substrates.
Other applications
It is also used in resistance-type
lambda probes (a type of
oxygen sensor).
Titanium dioxide is what allows
osseointegration between an
artificial medical implant and
bone.
Titanium dioxide in solution or suspension can be used to cleave
protein that contains the amino acid
proline at the site where proline is present. This breakthrough in cost-effective protein splitting took place at
ASU in 2006.
[4]
Titanium dioxide on silica is being developed as a form of odor control in
cat litter. The purchased photocatalyst is vastly cheaper than the purchased silica beads, per usage, and prolongs their effective odor-eliminating life substantially.
The Pilkington Activ glass has a special nano-scale, extremely thin
hydrophobic coating of microcrystalline titanium oxide which catalyses the break-down of organic surface contamination by ultraviolet light from the sun.
[2]
Historical uses
The
Vinland map, the map of
America ("
Vinland") that was supposedly drawn during mid-15th century based on data from the
Viking Age, has been declared a forgery on the basis that the ink on it contains traces of the TiO
2-form anatase; TiO
2 was not synthetically produced before the 1920s. Recently (1992) a counter-claim has been made that the compound can be formed from ancient ink.
Titanium dioxide white paint was used to paint the
Saturn V rocket, which is so far the only rocket that has sent astronauts to the moon. In
2002, a spectral analysis of
J002E3, a celestial object, showed that it had titanium dioxide on it, giving evidence it may be a Saturn V
S-IVB.
See also
★
Noxer, a building material incorporating TiO
2.
References
1. Spinodal equation of state for rutile TiO2, , E, Francisco, Physical Review B, 2003
2. Titanium Dioxide Manufacturing Processes
3. http://prola.aps.org/abstract/PR/v61/i1-2/p56_1
4. http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/article.cgi/ancham/2007/79/i04/pdf/ac0613737.pdf
External links
★
International Chemical Safety Card 0338
★
NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards
★
"Fresh doubt over America map", ''bbc.co.uk'', 30 July, 2002
★
A description of TiO2 photocatalysis
★
"Smog-busting paint soaks up noxious gases", Jenny Hogan, 'newscientist.com'', 04 February 2004
★
Crystal structures of the three forms of TiO2
★ Kutal, C., Serpone, N. (1993). Photosensitive Metal Organic Systems: Mechanistic Principles and Applications. American Chemical Society, Washington D.C
★
"Architecture in Italy goes green", Elisabetta Povoledo, ''International Herald Tribune'', November 22, 2006
★
"A Concrete Step Toward Cleaner Air", Bruno Giussani, ''BusinessWeek.com'', November 8, 2006