Hibonite Blue: A New Class of Intense Inorganic Blue Colorants

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Abstract

Commercially available spinel cobalt blue (CoAl2O4) utilizes a significant amount of carcinogenic Co2+, which makes its synthesis more hazardous and environmentally harmful. Considerable effort has been put into developing more environmentally benign and robust blue pigments to replace cobalt blue. A new class of blue pigments with tunable hue were prepared. The solid solution series, CaAl12-2xCoxTixO19 (0 < x ≤ 1), crystallizes in a hexagonal mineral hibonite (CaM12O19) structure with five distinct crystallographic sites for M cations (M = Al, Co, and Ti). The origin of intense blue color is attributed to a synergistic effect of allowed d-d transitions involving the chromophore Co2+ in both tetrahedral and trigonal bipyramidal crystal fields. Compared with commercial cobalt blue, these tunable hibonite blues possess a reddish hue that intensifies the blue color as observed in Y(In,Mn)O3 (YInMn) blues, with a significant reduction of Co2+ concentration from 33% to as low as 4% by mass. A significant advantage of hibonite blues over cobalt blue is the substantial reduction in carcinogenic cobalt content while enhancing the color properties at a reduced cost for raw materials.

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Duell, B. A., Li, J., & Subramanian, M. A. (2019). Hibonite Blue: A New Class of Intense Inorganic Blue Colorants. ACS Omega, 4(26), 22114–22118. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b03255

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