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2025-08-15 02:08
2631
Asia
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2025-08-15 02:01
2469
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2025-08-15 01:59
2803
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2025-08-15 01:53
860
The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has concluded that titanium oxide should not be considered safe as a food additive, due to uncertainties about possible inflammation and neurotoxicity (9Trusted Source).
...
2025-08-15 01:49
568
When used in an ultrafine-grade formulation, titanium dioxide becomes transparent to light, effectively making it an absorber of UV light. And because its particles are so small in this form, titanium dioxide creates a transparent barrier that absorbs UV light.
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2025-08-15 01:49
1955
US 1478347, Mitchell John L, Apparatus for calcining lithopone, published Dec 18, 1923, assigned to Mitchell John L
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2025-08-15 01:39
2293
Some websites maintain titanium dioxide is inferior to zinc oxide, another mineral sunscreen ingredient whose core characteristics are similar to those of titanium dioxide. The reality is that titanium dioxide is a great broad-spectrum SPF ingredient and is widely used in all manner of sun-protection products. What gets confusing for some consumers is trying to decipher research that ranks sunscreen ingredients by a UV spectrum graph. By most standards, broad-spectrum coverage for sunscreen ingredients is defined as one that surpasses 360 nanometers (abbreviated as “nm” - how the sun’s rays are measured). Titanium dioxide exceeds this range of protection, but depending on whose research you read, it either performs as well as or slightly below zinc oxide.
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2025-08-15 01:38
2847
Goshorn, J.H.; Black, C.K. (1929). The study of lithopone darkening. Industrial and Engineering Chemistry. 21 (4): 348–9. doi:10.1021/ie50232a021.
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2025-08-15 01:21
1628
Authors like to thank Sebastián García (LAMARX) for spectra acquisition, Carolina Leimbruguer for her support with TEM images and Yanina Altamirano, Nicolas Jaime and Javier Reparaz for animal care assistance.
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2025-08-14 23:46
672
Asia
The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has concluded that titanium oxide should not be considered safe as a food additive, due to uncertainties about possible inflammation and neurotoxicity (9Trusted Source).
When used in an ultrafine-grade formulation, titanium dioxide becomes transparent to light, effectively making it an absorber of UV light. And because its particles are so small in this form, titanium dioxide creates a transparent barrier that absorbs UV light.
US 1478347, Mitchell John L, Apparatus for calcining lithopone, published Dec 18, 1923, assigned to Mitchell John L
Some websites maintain titanium dioxide is inferior to zinc oxide, another mineral sunscreen ingredient whose core characteristics are similar to those of titanium dioxide. The reality is that titanium dioxide is a great broad-spectrum SPF ingredient and is widely used in all manner of sun-protection products. What gets confusing for some consumers is trying to decipher research that ranks sunscreen ingredients by a UV spectrum graph. By most standards, broad-spectrum coverage for sunscreen ingredients is defined as one that surpasses 360 nanometers (abbreviated as “nm” - how the sun’s rays are measured). Titanium dioxide exceeds this range of protection, but depending on whose research you read, it either performs as well as or slightly below zinc oxide.
Goshorn, J.H.; Black, C.K. (1929). The study of lithopone darkening. Industrial and Engineering Chemistry. 21 (4): 348–9. doi:10.1021/ie50232a021.
Authors like to thank Sebastián García (LAMARX) for spectra acquisition, Carolina Leimbruguer for her support with TEM images and Yanina Altamirano, Nicolas Jaime and Javier Reparaz for animal care assistance.
From dyes to flavorings, many people are becoming increasingly aware of the ingredients in their food.
Lithopone