pigmentide
Pigmentide, the Estonian term for pigments, are substances that impart color to materials by selective light absorption and scattering. They are generally insoluble, existing as particles dispersed in a binder or matrix rather than dissolving. This makes them suitable for paints, plastics, inks, cosmetics, and coatings, where durable color and opacity are important. Pigmentide can be naturally occurring or synthetic and are widely classified as inorganic or organic.
Inorganic pigments include iron oxides (red, yellow, brown, black), titanium dioxide (white), chromium oxide green, and
Key properties are hue, tinting strength, opacity or transparency, and lightfastness, as well as dispersion stability
Pigmentide are produced by extraction from natural sources or by chemical synthesis, enabling a wide range
Producing and using pigmentide is subject to safety and environmental regulation; frameworks such as REACH govern