Uses of Titanium Metal and Titanium Dioxide (2024)

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Article by: Hobart M. King, PhD, RPG

Uses of Titanium Metal and Titanium Dioxide (1)

CIA A-12 Reconnaissance Aircraft: Photograph of a CIA A-12 supersonic reconnaissance aircraft named "The Titanium Goose" preparing to refuel at high altitude. The name is fitting as many of its parts are made with titanium. Image by the Central Intelligence Agency.

What is Titanium?

Titanium is a silver metal that is strong, resistant to corrosion, and inert. It is the ninth most abundant element in Earth's crust. Instead of occurring in large deposits, small amounts of titanium occur in almost every rock.

Titanium is an important constituent in a small number of minerals. About 90% of the titanium in Earth's crust occurs in ilmenite, a mineral that most people have never heard of. It is an iron titanium oxide with a chemical composition of FeTiO3. The rest of Earth's near-surface titanium is in minerals such as anatase, brookite, leucoxene, perovskite, rutile, and sphene.

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Uses of Titanium Metal and Titanium Dioxide (2)

Nitinol 60: Nitinol 60 is an alloy containing 60 percent nickel and 40 percent titanium. Normally stainless steel is used to make bearings because it is hard, but stainless steel is subject to corrosion. Nitinol 60 solved the corrosion problem without a loss of strength and did not react with bearing lubricants. Image by NASA.

Uses of Titanium Metal

Titanium is a familiar metal. Many people know that it is used in jewelry, prosthetics, tennis rackets, goalie masks, scissors, bicycle frames, surgical tools, mobile phones and other high-performance products. Titanium is as strong as steel but weights about half as much. It is twice as strong as aluminum but only about 60% heavier.

Titanium combines with iron, aluminum, vanadium, nickel, molybdenum and other metals to produce high-performance alloys. Jet engines, spacecraft, military equipment, bearings, body armor, and other high-tech products need parts made with these alloys.

Uses of Titanium Metal and Titanium Dioxide (3)

Titanium Aircraft Parts: Titanium metal and alloys provide high-strength, lightweight, corrosion-resistant parts for aircraft engines, controls and structural components. This NASA F-16XL has a titanium glove for laminar-flow studies covering part of its left wing. NASA image by Jim Ross.

Uses of Titanium Metal and Titanium Dioxide (4)

White Paint: Most of the white paint used today contains titanium dioxide as a pigment. This gives the paint a bright white color that is permanent, with opacity to cover in one coat, and a brightness that reflects light. When the paint dries, the mineral coating that is left on your wall is titanium dioxide. Image copyright iStockphoto / Okea.

What Is Titanium Dioxide?

Titanium dioxide is a bright, white, opaque material with a chemical composition of TiO2. It is produced by oxidizing ilmenite or other titanium minerals at high temperatures. It is then ground into the fine powder required for its many uses.

About ten times more titanium is used in the form of titanium dioxide compared to titanium metal. Most people have never heard of titanium being used in this form. This is because titanium dioxide is an ingredient in products rather than a primary material.

Uses of Titanium Metal and Titanium Dioxide (5)

Polishing Compounds: Titanium dioxide powder is carefully classified by particle size and sold as a polish for lapidary and metal work. The image is a rock tumbler barrel just opened with a thick white froth of polish.

Uses of Titanium Dioxide

The most common use of titanium is as a whitening, brightening and opacifying agent. High-quality white paints usually contain significant amounts of titanium dioxide, which has a pigment name of "titanium white." Titanium dioxide increases the paint's whiteness and reflectivity. When you enter a room and turn on the light, the paint is highly reflective and makes the room appear brighter - because more light is being reflected from the painted surfaces. Titanium dioxide also increases the paint's opacity, allowing one coat to cover what is below in many situations.

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For nearly 2000 years, "lead white" was an important pigment used in white paint. In 1904 Sherwin-Williams, a paint manufacturer, reported on the dangers of paint containing lead pigment. From that time paint manufacturers began moving away from lead pigments, and titanium pigment was the most viable replacement. Today, most of the white paint manufactured has titanium dioxide as its pigment.

Titanium dioxide is pressed into the fibers of high-quality papers to improve their whiteness, brightness, and texture. It is added to skim milk to improve its whiteness and opacity. It is added to toothpaste, rubber, plastics, cosmetics, sunscreen, and many food products for the same reason. These are materials used by almost every person on Earth almost every day. Few people realize the role that titanium plays within them. It can be used in foods, cosmetics and other products that people consume because it is inert.

Titanium dioxide powder is also graded to specific particle sizes for use as a polishing compound. It is used for polishing gemstones, metals and other materials. It is often less effective than other polishes but when it is effective can provide a cost savings.

Uses of Titanium Metal and Titanium Dioxide (6)

Heavy Mineral Sand: Shallow digging at Folly Beach, South Carolina, exposes thin layers of heavy mineral sands. Most of the ilmenite mined today is from sands with a heavy mineral concentration. Photograph by Carleton Bern, United States Geological Survey.

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Where Does Titanium Come From?

Most of the world's titanium is produced by mining heavy mineral sands. These sands occur down-gradient from exposed masses of igneous rock such as gabbro, norite, and anorthosite. These rocks contain titanium-bearing minerals such as ilmenite, anatase, brookite, leucoxene, perovskite, rutile, and sphene.

When these rocks are broken down by weathering, the titanium minerals are among the most resistant. They are concentrated by weathering and transported downstream as grains of sand and silt. Eventually, they are deposited as sand along the coastline of a continent. This is where they are usually dredged or mined. Mining also occurs at inland locations where titanium minerals were deposited during periods of sea level higher than what we know today.

These heavy mineral sands might contain a few percent by weight of ilmenite and other titanium minerals. After the sand is mined, it goes to a processing plant that recovers titanium-bearing minerals. Other valuable minerals might be recovered at the same time. They are then processed or sold for the production of titanium metal or titanium dioxide. The sand is then returned to the location where it was mined and the beach is reclaimed.

Uses of Titanium Metal and Titanium Dioxide (7)

Titanium in Stream Sediments and Soils: A map showing the abundance of titanium, in the form of titanium dioxide, in stream sediments and soils of part of the eastern United States. A titanium-rich zone corresponding to the Virginia Blue Ridge physiographic province shows values of over 3% by weight titanium dioxide, United States Geological Survey.

Titanium Production in the United States

The United States uses more titanium minerals than it currently produces, making it a net importer of titanium. A limited amount of dredging has occurred off the Atlantic coast of Florida. There shoreline sediments are dredged and processed to remove heavy mineral sands. Ilmenite is the primary titanium-bearing mineral recovered by this activity.

Onshore mining has occurred at numerous locations in Virginia. There an ilmenite-bearing anorthosite body in the Blue Ridge physiographic province has been exposed by erosion. Sediments derived from this erosion can locally contain a few percent heavy minerals by weight, with ilmenite being the primary titanium-bearing mineral. These deposits have been excavated and processed to remove their heavy mineral content. The area where this mining occurs corresponds to titanium-rich stream sediments and soils sampled, analyzed and mapped by the National Geochemical Survey (see accompanying map).

To meet its titanium requirements, the United States imports titanium mineral concentrates. Leading titanium producers include: Australia, Canada, China, Japan, Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, Norway, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and South Africa.

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