titanium dioxide used for tire suppliers

This article discusses the discovery of phosphorescent lithopone on watercolor drawings by American artist John La Farge dated between 1890 and 1905 and the history of lithopone in the pigment industry in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Despite having many desirable qualities for use in white watercolor or oil paints, the development of lithopone as an artists’ pigment was hampered by its tendency to darken in sunlight. Its availability to, and adoption by, artists remain unclear, as colormen's trade catalogs were generally not explicit in describing white pigments as containing lithopone. Further, lithopone may be mistaken for lead white during visual examination and its short-lived phosphorescence can be easily missed by the uninformed observer. Phosphorescent lithopone has been documented on only one other work-to-date: a watercolor by Van Gogh. In addition to the history of lithopone's manufacture, the article details the mechanism for its phosphorescence and its identification aided by Raman spectroscopy and spectrofluorimetry.

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 2) Purification: Add ammonium persulfate to the final immersion solution for one-time oxidation and iron removal, and add activated carbon to adsorb arsenic and iron co-precipitation to achieve the purpose of removing arsenic. Add the polyacrylamide coagulant to separate and filter before separation. The sulfide solution is added to the solution to remove sulfur, and the separated filtrate obtained by the separation is replaced with zinc powder to remove the remaining impurities to obtain a zinc sulfate ammonia complex liquid, which is used in the next step;

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