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Novel Surface Treatment For Hydrophobicizing Pigments

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Title: Novel Surface Treatment For Hydrophobicizing Pigments


1
Novel Surface Treatment For Hydrophobicizing
Pigments
Frank Mazzella, David Schlossman, and Yun Shao,
Ph.D. Kobo Products, Inc.
PCITX - New York September 28-30, 2004
2
Overview
  • What is needed to make a good surface treatment
    ?
  • Common used substrates.
  • Common Treatments.
  • Specialty Treatments.
  • Summary.

3
Surface Treatments Why ?
  • Improve performance
  • Make the product Hydrophobic.
  • Make the product Lipophobic.
  • Improve the products ability to disperse in
    various media.
  • Change the oil absorption of the product.
  • Improve wear, adhesion, or other desirable
    attribute.

4
Requirements for Good Surface Treatment
  • The surface has free hydroxyl groups or available
    surface moisture.
  • This allows the treatment to react and attach.
  • Surface area to mass is low.
  • The smaller the particle the more treatment
    required due to the larger surface area
    available.
  • The substrate is compatible with the process.

5
Requirements for Good Surface Treatment
  • Examples of good surface to coat
  • Most metal oxides such as iron oxide and titanium
    dioxide.
  • Starch.
  • Examples of Hard to Coat surfaces
  • Organic Pigments and Lakes
  • Polymers
  • Minerals such as Mica

6
Popular Hydrophobic Organic Treatments
7
Treatments Studied
  • Crosspolymer treatments (TTS, TTB TTM)
    promote the
    wetting of pigments in multimedia.
  • Branched Alkyl Silane treatment (BAS)
    enhance wetting in non-polar media.
  • Aminosilane / Silane Treatment for Hard to Treat
    Surfaces (HTT)
    super hydrophobic
    prevents bleed.

8
Crosspolymer Treatments
9
Crosspolymer Treatments - Structure
Kobo codes TTS ITT / Silane ( R
Caprylyl) TTM ITT / Methicone ( R
Methyl) TTB ITT / Dimethicone (R Branched
Dimethicone)
10
Crosspolymer Treatments - Structure
  • INCI Names
  • TTS Isopropyl Titanium Triisostearate/
    Triethoxycaprylylsilane Crosspolymer
  • TTM Isopropyl Titanium Triisostearate /
    Methicone Crosspolymer
  • TTB Isopropyl Titanium Triisostearate /
    Dimethicone Crosspolymer

US patent No. 60,472,527
11
Hydrophobicity of Crosspolymer vs Its Components
2 gr. of Treated Pigment in 50 mL Water Shaken 10
times - Picture taken after 10 minutes
12
Dispersions with 10 nm TiO2
Formulas
Test Results
13
Branched Alkyl Silane Treatment
14
Branched Alkyl Silane
  • Very low Hydrogen potential.
  • Better affinity in many organic non polar systems
  • More hydrophobic than the straight chained alkyl
    Silanes.

15
Branched Alkyl Silane - Structure
Schematic Representation of the Branched Alkyl
Silane used to Coat
16
Comparison of Methicone vs BAS treatments
60 nm TiO2 Dispersions in Silicone
40 - Methicone Treated
50 - BAS Treated
17
Comparison of Methicone vs BAS treatments
18
Branched Alkyl Silane - Summary
  • Benefits of the Branched Alkyl Silane in a
    Dispersion
  • Higher pigment levels in the dispersion with,
  • Lower viscosity dispersion (pourable)
  • Very good dispersion stability
  • No gelling, or settling
  • No vehicle separation

19
Treatment for Hard to Treat Surfaces
20
Hard to Treat Surfaces
  • A process for treating and coating materials that
    traditionally do not coat well.
    (Patent WO 03/043567).
  • These include such materials as
  • - Organic pigments and lakes (example Red 7 Ca
    Lake)
  • - Mineral Silicates such as Mica and Sericite
  • - Porous Silicates.

21
Hard to Treat Surfaces
  • Treatment type
  • - Amino Silane or Amino Alkoxy Silane treatment
  • Advantages to this treatment type
  • - No residual Silane reactions.
  • - Surfaces that could not be effectively
    treated to make
  • them hydrophobic can now be treated.

22
Stability of Organic Lakes in Water
FDC Blue 1 Aluminum Lake
FDC Red 40 Aluminum Lake
NT
MS
HTT
NT
MS
HTT
NT non-treated lake - after 1 day _at_ room
temperature MS methicone-treated lake - after 7
day _at_ room temperature HTT Hard to treat
treatment on lake - after 30 day _at_ room
temperature
23
Stability of Organic Lakes in Water
Non-treated - 1 day _at_ room temp HTT-treated -
30 day _at_ room temp HTT-treated - 30 day _at_ 50C
Comparison of percent bleed between HTT-treated
and non-treated lakes in 2 aqueous suspensions.
Measurements by spectrophotometry, results
expressed in percent of the original lake content.
24
Effect of pH on Stability in Water
pH 11 Organic Base
pH 2 Mineral Acid
pH 12 Mineral Base
pH 3 Organic Acid
FDC Red 40 Aluminum Lake
1 Day test 2 Lake in water
25
Effect of Surfactant on Stability in Water
Methicone treated in 2 SLS
HTT treated in 2 SLS
FDC Blue 1 Aluminum Lake
7 Days test 2 lake in water
26
Stability on Mineral Surface
Methicone treated Sericite
HTT treated Sericite
1 Day test 2 Sericite in water
27
Hard to Treat Surfaces - Summary
  • Much improved hydrophobic properties.
  • Outperforms Methicone with no Hydrogen potential.
  • Coat very well to mineral surfaces that normally
    dont coat well.
  • Prevent water bleed at various pHs and in salts.

28
Summary
  • Surface treatments can be made and modified to
    achieve a specific performance criteria
  • Improved Dispersability
  • Improved Hydrophobicity.
  • Reduce or eliminate synerisis
  • Increase or Reduce Gloss

29

Acknowledgements
I wish to thank the following for their efforts
in making this presentation possible Shirley
Wang, Eric Smith, David Cornelio, Scott
Holzapfel, Uyen Nguyen, and Pascal Delrieu.
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