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Making Lithopone — The Co-Precipitated White Pigment of the Industrial Age
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Charlie

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Charlie

23. mai 2026DE
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Making Lithopone — The Co-Precipitated White Pigment of the Industrial Age

Lithopone is a white pigment composed of zinc sulfide (ZnS) and barium sulfate (BaSO₄) co-precipitated as an intimate mixture. Patented in 1874 and commercially produced from the 1880s onward, it was the first serious challenger to lead white's two-thousand-year dominance of the white pigment market. Unlike lead white, lithopone is completely non-toxic — a critical advantage as awareness of lead poisoning grew throughout the 19th century.

The chemistry is elegant in its simplicity: when solutions of zinc sulfate and barium sulfide are mixed, a double decomposition reaction occurs. The zinc and sulfide ions combine to form insoluble zinc sulfide, while the barium and sulfate ions form insoluble barium sulfate. Because both products precipitate simultaneously from the same solution, they form an extremely intimate mixture at the molecular level — far finer than any mechanical mixing could achieve.

The raw precipitate must then be calcined at 700–750 °C to develop full opacity and whiteness. This calcination converts the amorphous zinc sulfide into the crystalline wurtzite form, which scatters light far more efficiently. After calcination, the pigment is quenched in cold water (a step unique to lithopone manufacture) to 'fix' the crystal structure and prevent reversion.

Lithopone was widely used in house paint, wallpaper, linoleum, rubber goods, and artist's paints from the 1890s until the 1940s, when titanium white gradually replaced it. It remains in production today for industrial coatings where cost matters more than maximum opacity.

SAFETY NOTE: Barium sulfide is toxic and produces hydrogen sulfide gas (rotten egg smell) in acidic conditions. Work in a well-ventilated area. The calcination step requires temperatures above 700 °C — standard kiln or furnace safety applies.

Avancé
6–8 hours (plus overnight drying)

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