Bayferrox® Pigment: application on paints.

The paint applied on different substrates form a film that may have a protective or decorative function.

The Bayferrox® pigments are part of these formulations destined to several kinds of applications. Here are some of them:

Industrial Paints

Anti-corrosive paints

House Paints

Bayferrox® may be used as a primary or functional pigment to serve the various purposes of industrial painting, such as protecting the patrimony, safety and hygiene, for example.

 

Bayferrox® pigments make it harder for the aggressive medium to pass. Its particles, even though tiny, are not crossed because they are solid and massive.

The pigments indicated for electrostatic paint pigmentation are high-performance iron oxides, with excellent resistance to sunrays, ultra-violate rays and more aggressive environments, such as gas pipes, sea environments, industrial paints. All micronized Bayferrox® pigments are indicated for such applications.

 

The Bayferrox® Line has specific pigments for use in lacquer, oil paints, latex paints, and acrylic paints, designed for use in houses and buildings.

The internal and external use wood is subjected to a series of environmental aggressions, and when not protected quickly and intensely it suffers the consequence, deteriorating and loosing its beauty.  Bayferrox® pigments present in these paints’ composition cooperate to protect from the sun, rain and tossing of the sea, besides presenting a wide range of shades to serve painters, decorators and the “Do-It-Yourself” enthusiasts.

 

Paints to repaint cars

Car Paints

LANXESS’ pigments present all the properties required by the paint segment: fine grounding, no contaminants, apparent high density and excellent shine on the bases applied, color constancy and color specification according to the market demand.

 

The Bayferrox® pigments provide stability and colorimetric limits that meet the standards required by the car paints market.

 

(Text based on the book "Tintas e vernizes - Ciência e tecnologia" by ABRAFATI – 2nd edition - p. 734 to 736).