Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Bismuth vanadate

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Density
  
6.1 g/cm³

Appearance
  
bright yellow solid

Bismuth vanadate BismuthVanadate Yellow lemon Kremer Pigmente GmbH amp CoKG

Bismuth vanadate is the inorganic compound with the formula BiVO4. It is a bright yellow solid. It is a representative of "complex inorganic colored pigments," or CICPs. More specifically bismuth vanadate is a mixed-metal oxide. Bismuth vanadate is also known under the Colour Index International as C.I. Pigment Yellow 184. It occurs naturally as the rare minerals pucherite, clinobisvanite, and dreyerite.

Contents

Bismuth vanadate Environmental Challenges Demand New Color Solutions 20120104

History and uses

Bismuth vanadate Habich Bismuth Vanadates Easy Disperse

Bismuth vanadate is a bright yellow powder and may have a slight green tint. When used as a pigment it contains a high Chroma and excellent hiding power. In nature, bismuth vanadate can be found as the mineral pucherite, clinobisvanite, and dreyerite depending on the particular polymorph formed. Its synthesis was first recorded in a pharmaceutical patent in 1924 and began to be used readily as a pigment in the mid-1980s. Today it is manufactured across the world for pigment use.

Properties

Bismuth vanadate New perspective for Bismuth Vanadate Pigments

Most commercial bismuth vanadate pigments are now based on pure bismuth vanadate with monoclinic (clinobisvanite) or tetragonal (dreyerite) structure though in the past two phase systems involving a 4:3 relationship between bismuth vanadate and bismuth molybdate (Bi2MoO6) have been used. In the monoclinic phase, BiVO4 is an n-type photoactive semiconductor with a bandgap of 2.4 eV, which has been investigated for water splitting after doping with W and Mo. BiVO4 photoanodes have been demonstrated to have a record solar-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency of 5.2% (highest for metal-oxide photo-electrode) with the advantage of a very simple and cheap material.

Production

Bismuth vanadate httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

While most CICPs are formed exclusively through solid state, high temperature calcination, bismuth vanadate can be formed from a series of pH controlled precipitation reactions (it is important to note these reactions can be carried out with or without the presence of molybdenum depending on the desired final phase). It is also possible to start with the parent oxides (Bi2O3 and V2O5) and perform a high temperature calcination to achieve a pure product.

Bismuth vanadate Bismuth Vanadate 53801777 China Bismuth Vanadate 53801777


Bismuth vanadate Changsha Asian Light Economic Trade Co Ltd

Bismuth vanadate China Pigment Yellow Py 184 Bismuth Yellow Bismuth Vanadate China

References

Bismuth vanadate Wikipedia