User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
pigments p- Plural of pigment
Verb
pigments- third-person singular of pigment
Extensive Definition
- For the drug referred to as "pigment," see black tar heroin.
A pigment is a material that changes the color of light it reflects
as the result of selective color absorption. This physical process
differs from fluorescence, phosphorescence, and
other forms of luminescence, in which the
material itself emits light. Many materials selectively absorb
certain wavelengths
of light. Materials that humans have chosen and developed for use
as pigments usually have special properties that make them ideal
for coloring other materials. A pigment must have a high tinting strength relative to the
materials it colors. It must be stable in solid form at ambient
temperatures.
For industrial applications, as well as in the
arts, permanence and stability are desirable properties. Pigments
that are not permanent are called fugitive.
Fugitive pigments fade over time, or with exposure to light, while
some eventually blacken.
Pigments are used for coloring paint, ink, plastic, fabric, cosmetics, food and other materials. Most
pigments used in manufacturing and the
visual
arts are dry colourants, usually ground
into a fine powder. This
powder is added to a vehicle (or matrix), a relatively neutral or
colorless material that acts as a binder.
A distinction is usually made between a pigment,
which is insoluble in
the vehicle (resulting in a suspension), and a dye, which either is itself a
liquid or is soluble in
its vehicle (resulting in a solution). A colorant can be both a
pigment and a dye depending on the vehicle it is used in. In some
cases, a pigment can be manufactured from a dye by precipitating
a soluble dye with a metallic salt. The resulting pigment is called
a lake
pigment.
Physical basis
Pigments appear the colors they are because they
selectively reflect and absorb certain wavelengths of light.
White light is a roughly
equal mixture of the entire visible spectrum of light. When this
light encounters a pigment, some wavelengths are absorbed by the
chemical bonds and substituents of the pigment, and others are
reflected. This new reflected light spectrum creates the appearance
of a color. Ultramarine
reflects blue light, and absorbs other colors. Pigments, unlike
fluorescent or
phosphorescent
substances, can only subtract wavelengths from the source light,
never add new ones.
The appearance of pigments is intimately
connected to the color of the source light. Sunlight has a high
color
temperature, and a fairly uniform spectrum, and is considered a
standard for white light. Artificial light sources tend to have
great peaks in some parts of their spectrum, and deep valleys in
others. Viewed under these conditions, pigments will appear
different colors.
Color spaces used to represent colors numerically
must specify their light source. Lab
color measurements, unless otherwise noted, assume that the
measurement was taken under a D65 light source, or "Daylight 6500
K", which is roughly the color
temperature of sunlight.
Other properties of a color, such as its
saturation or lightness, may be determined by the other substances
that accompany pigments. Binders and fillers added to pure pigment
chemicals also have their own reflection and absorption patterns,
which can affect the final spectrum. Likewise, in pigment/binder
mixtures, individual rays of light may not encounter pigment
molecules, and may be reflected as is. These stray rays of source
light contribute to the saturation of the color. Pure pigment
allows very little white light to escape, producing a highly
saturated color. A small quantity of pigment mixed with a lot of
white binder, however, will appear desaturated and pale, due to the
high quantity of escaping white light.
Pigment groups
- Arsenic pigments: Paris Green
- Carbon pigments: Carbon Black, Ivory Black, Vine Black, Lamp Black
- Cadmium pigments: cadmium pigments, Cadmium Green, Cadmium Red, Cadmium Yellow, Cadmium Orange
- Iron oxide pigments: Caput Mortuum, oxide red, Red Ochre, Sanguine, Venetian Red
- Prussian blue
- Chromium pigments: Chrome Green, Chrome Yellow
- Cobalt pigments: Cobalt Blue, Cerulean Blue, Cobalt Violet, Aureolin
- Lead pigments: lead white, Naples yellow, Cremnitz White, red lead
- Copper pigments: Paris Green, Verdigris, Viridian, Egyptian Blue, Han Purple
- Titanium pigments: Titanium White, Titanium Beige, Titanium yellow, Titanium Black
- Ultramarine pigments: Ultramarine, Ultramarine Green Shade, French Ultramarine
- Mercury pigments: Vermilion
- Zinc pigments: Zinc White
- Clay earth pigments (which are also iron oxides): Raw Sienna, Burnt Sienna, Raw Umber, Burnt Umber, Yellow Ochre.
- Lapis lazuli,
- Biological origins: Alizarin, Alizarin Crimson, Gamboge, Indigo, Indian Yellow, Cochineal Red, Tyrian Purple, Rose madder
- Other Organic: Pigment Red 170, Phthalo Green, Phthalo Blue, Quinacridone Magenta.
Biological pigments
Spain's conquest of a New World empire in the
16th century introduced new pigments and colors to peoples on both
sides of the Atlantic. Carmine, a dye and
pigment derived from a parasitic insect found in Central
and South
America, attained great status and value in Europe. Produced
from harvested, dried, and crushed cochineal insects, carmine
could be used in fabric dye, body paint, or in its solid lake form,
almost any kind of paint or cosmetic.
Natives of Peru had been
producing cochineal dyes for textiles since at least 700 CE, but
Europeans had never seen the color before. When the Spanish invaded
the Aztec
empire in what is now Mexico, they were
quick to exploit the color for new trade opportunities. Carmine became the
region's second most valuable export next to silver. Pigments
produced from the cochineal insect gave the Catholic cardinals
their vibrant robes and the English "Redcoats" their distinctive
uniforms. The true source of the pigment, an insect, was kept
secret until the 18th century, when biologists discovered the
source.
While Carmine was popular in Europe, blue
remained an exclusive color, associated with wealth and status. The
17th century Dutch master Johannes
Vermeer often made lavish use of lapis
lazuli, along with Carmine and Indian
Yellow, in his vibrant paintings.
Development of synthetic pigments
The earliest known pigments were natural
minerals. Natural iron oxides give a range of colors and are found
in many Paleolithic and
Neolithic
cave paintings. Two examples include Red Ochre, anhydrous Fe2O3,
and the hydrated Yellow Ochre (Fe2O3.H2O). Charcoal, or carbon
black, has also been used as a black pigment since prehistoric
times.
Two of the first synthetic pigments were white
lead (basic lead carbonate, (PbCO3)2Pb(OH)2) and blue frit
(Egyptian
Blue). White lead is made by combining lead with vinegar
(acetic
acid, CH3COOH) in the presence of CO2. Blue frit is calcium
copper silicate and was made from glass colored with a copper ore,
such as malachite.
These pigments were used as early as the second millennium
BCE.
The Industrial
and Scientific
Revolutions brought a huge expansion in the range of synthetic
pigments, pigments that are manufactured or refined from naturally
occurring materials, available both for manufacturing and artistic
expression. Because of the expense of Lapis
Lazuli, much effort went into finding a less costly blue
pigment.
Prussian
Blue was the first modern synthetic pigment, discovered by
accident in 1704. By the early 19th century, synthetic and metallic
blue pigments had been added to the range of blues, including
French
ultramarine, a synthetic form of lapis
lazuli, and the various forms of Cobalt and
Cerulean
Blue. In the early 20th century, organic chemistry added
Phthalo
Blue, a synthetic, organic pigment with overwhelming tinting
power.
Discoveries in color science created new
industries and drove changes in fashion and taste. The discovery
in 1856 of mauveine,
the first aniline dye,
was a forerunner for the development of hundreds of synthetic
dyes and pigments. Mauveine was discovered by an 18-year-old
chemist named William
Henry Perkin, who went on to exploit his discovery in industry
and become wealthy. His success attracted a generation of
followers, as young scientists went into organic
chemistry to pursue riches. Within a few years, chemists had
synthesized a substitute for madder in the production of
Alizarin
Crimson. By the closing decades of the 19th century, textiles, paints, and other
commodities in colors such as red, crimson, blue, and purple had
become affordable.
Development of chemical pigments and dyes helped
bring new industrial prosperity to Germany and other
countries in northern Europe, but it brought dissolution and
decline elsewhere. In Spain's former New World empire, the
production of cochineal colors employed thousands of low-paid
workers. The Spanish monopoly on cochineal production had been
worth a fortune until the early 1800s, when the
Mexican War of Independence and other market changes disrupted
production. Organic
chemistry delivered the final blow for the cochineal color
industry. When chemists created inexpensive substitutes for
carmine, an industry and a way of life went into steep
decline.
New sources for historic pigments
Before the Industrial
Revolution, many pigments were known by the location where they
were produced. Pigments based on minerals and clays often bore the
name of the city or region where they were mined. Raw Sienna and
Burnt
Sienna came from Siena, Italy, while Raw Umber and
Burnt
Umber came from Umbria. These
pigments were among the easiest to synthesize, and chemists created
modern colors based on the originals that were more consistent than
colors mined from the original ore bodies. But the place names
remained.
Historically and culturally, many famous natural
pigments have been replaced with synthetic pigments, while
retaining historic names. In some cases the original color name has
shifted in meaning, as a historic name has been applied to a
popular modern color. By convention, a contemporary mixture of
pigments that replaces a historical pigment is indicated by calling
the resulting color a hue, but manufacturers are not always careful
in maintaining this distinction. The following examples illustrate
the shifting nature of historic pigment names:
Before the development of synthetic pigments, and
the refinement of techniques for extracting mineral pigments,
batches of color were often inconsistent. With the development of a
modern color industry, manufacturers and professionals have
cooperated to create international standards for identifying,
producing, measuring, and testing colors.
First published in 1905, the Munsell
Color System became the foundation for a series of color
models, providing objective methods for the measurement of color.
The Munsell system describes a color in three dimensions, hue, value (lightness), and
chroma (color
purity), where chroma is the difference from gray at a given hue
and value.
By the middle years of the 20th century,
standardized methods for pigment chemistry were available, part of
an international movement to create such standards in industry. The
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) develops
technical standards for the manufacture of pigments and dyes. ISO
standards define various industrial and chemical properties, and
how to test for them. The principal ISO standards that relate to
all pigments are as follows:
- ISO-787 General methods of test for pigments and extenders
- ISO-8780 Methods of dispersion for assessment of dispersion characteristics
Other ISO standards pertain to particular classes
or categories of pigments, based on their chemical composition,
such as ultramarine
pigments, titanium
dioxide, iron oxide pigments, and so forth.
Many manufacturers of paints, inks, textiles,
plastics, and colors have voluntarily adopted the Colour
Index International (CII) as a standard for identifying the
pigments that they use in manufacturing particular colors. First
published in 1925, and now published jointly on the web by the
Society of Dyers and Colourists (United
Kingdom) and the
American Association of Textile Chemists and Colorists (USA),
this index is recognized internationally as the authoritative
reference on colorants. It encompasses more than 27,000 products
under more than 13,000 generic color index names.
In the CII schema, each pigment has a generic
index number that identifies it chemically, regardless of
proprietary and historic names. For example, Phthalo Blue
has been known by a variety of generic and proprietary names since
its discovery in the 1930s. In much of Europe, phthalocyanine blue
is better known as Helio Blue, or by a proprietary name such as
Winsor Blue. An American paint manufacturer, Grumbacher, registered
an alternate spelling (Thalo Blue) as a trademark. Colour
Index International resolves all these conflicting historic,
generic, and proprietary names so that manufacturers and consumers
can identify the pigment (or dye) used in a particular color
product. In the CII, all Phthalo Blue
pigments are designated by a generic colour index number as either
PB15 or PB36, short for pigment blue 15 and pigment blue 16. (The
two forms of Phthalo Blue, PB15 and PB16, reflect slight variations
in molecular structure that produce a slightly more greenish or
reddish blue.)
Scientific and technical issues
Selection of a pigment for a particular
application is determined by cost, and by the physical properties
and attributes of the pigment itself. For example, a pigment that
is used to color glass must have very high heat stability in order
to survive the manufacturing process; but, suspended in the glass
vehicle, its resistance to alkali or acidic materials is not an issue.
In artistic paint, heat stability is less important, while lightfastness and toxicity are greater
concerns.
The following are some of the attributes of
pigments that determine their suitability for particular
manufacturing processes and applications:
- Lightfastness
- Heat stability
- Toxicity
- Tinting strength
- Staining
- Dispersion
- Opacity or transparency
- Resistance to alkalis and acids
- Reactions and interactions between pigments
Swatches
Pure pigments reflect light in a very specific
way that cannot be precisely duplicated by the discrete light
emitters in a computer
display. However, by making careful measurements of pigments,
close approximations can be made. The Munsell
Color System provides a good conceptual explanation of what is
missing. Munsell devised a system that provides an objective
measure of color in three dimensions: hue, value (or lightness),
and chroma. Computer displays in general are unable to show the
true chroma of many pigments, but the hue and lightness can be
reproduced with relative accuracy. However, when the gamma of a
computer display deviates from the reference value, the hue is also
systematically biased.
The following approximations assume a display
device at gamma
2.2, using the sRGB color
space. The further a display device deviates from these
standards, the less accurate these swatches will be. Swatches are
based on the average measurements of several lots of single-pigment
watercolor paints, converted from Lab color
space to sRGB color
space for viewing on a computer display. Different brands and
lots of the same pigment may vary in color. Furthermore, pigments
have inherently complex reflectance spectra that
will render their color appearance
greatly different depending on the spectrum of the source
illumination; a property called metamerism.
Averaged measurements of pigment samples will only yield
approximations of their true appearance under a specific source of
illumination. Computer display systems use a technique called
chromatic adaptation transforms to emulate the
correlated color temperature of illumination sources, and
cannot perfectly reproduce the intricate spectral combinations
originally seen. In many cases the perceived color of a pigment
falls outside of the gamut
of computer displays and a method called gamut
mapping is used to approximate the true appearance. Gamut
mapping trades off any one of Lightness,
Hue or Saturation
accuracy to render the color on screen, depending on the priority
chosen in the conversion's
ICC rendering
intent.
Notes
References
External links
pigments in Arabic: خضاب
pigments in Azerbaijani: Piqment
pigments in Catalan: Pigment
pigments in Czech: Pigment
pigments in Danish: Pigment
pigments in German: Pigment
pigments in Spanish: Pigmento (pintura)
pigments in Esperanto: Pigmento
pigments in Persian: رنگدانه
pigments in French: Pigment
pigments in Galician: Pigmento
pigments in Croatian: Pigment
pigments in Indonesian: Pigmen
pigments in Italian: Pigmento
pigments in Hebrew: פיגמנט
pigments in Lithuanian: Pigmentas
pigments in Dutch: Pigment
pigments in Japanese: 顔料
pigments in Norwegian Nynorsk: Pigment
pigments in Occitan (post 1500): Pigment
pigments in Oromo: Pigment
pigments in Polish: Pigment
pigments in Portuguese: Pigmento
pigments in Romanian: Pigment
pigments in Simple English: Pigment
pigments in Slovak: Pigment (maliarstvo)
pigments in Serbian: pigment
pigments in Finnish: Pigmentti
pigments in Swedish: Pigment
pigments in Turkish: Pigment
pigments in Chinese: 色素