Abstract:
Increasing efforts to address environmental issues related to industrial waste and the consumption
of natural resources by industrial activities have become a global issue. Development in all
direction includes significant reductions in waste generation through waste prevention, reduction,
recycling, and reuse strategies. At the same time, the expansion of industries worldwide requires
a considerable amount of pigment for the industries as an input. The project’s main activities were
two broad classes; extracting and processing steel slag from steel rolling waste for pigment
application. Then,synthetic and extracted iron was doping in the copper chromate pigment to study
its colouring properties. In the first part, the iron content of the steel slag was investigated using
X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF); then, iron was extracted using sulphuric acid as a leaching agent, the
Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectroscopy (ICPMS) were used to investigate the chemicals
leached in the liquid solution. Next, the annealing temperature was determined from the
thermographic-Differential Thermal analyzer (TG-DTA), and based on the result extracted sample
was annealed at 700C, 800C, 900C and 1000C. After annealing the extracted sample, the
crystalline property, crystallite and particle size, morphology, optical and colouring properties
were investigated using X-Ray Diffraction (XRD), Dynamic Light Scattering (DLS), Field
Emission Gun-Scanning Electron Microscopy (FEG-SEM), Ultraviolet-Visible Spectroscopy
Near Infrared (UV-VIS NIR) and Commission Internationale de I’Echlarge (CIEL*a*b*). The
characterization results indicated that the sample has good crystallinity, and the formation of
hematite(𝛼-Fe2O3) crystalline begins at 700C. However, a new crystalline structure with a
chemical formula of (Al3Fe15O12) was observed beyond 800C that overlapped with (𝛼-Fe2O3).
The overlapping was observed at around 33.3 and 35.8 2 theta on the XRD peak. Moreover, the
range of the extracted sample was from nano to micro with some agglomeration. The optical
properties indicated a metal-to-ligand charge transfer at 250 nm while metal-to-ligand charge
transfer was between 300 and 550nm. In the end, the colouring result becomes in good agreement
with brown red and dark red pigment with good agreement with commercial hematite at 800C,
with L* = 30.77, a* = 15.46 and b* = 29.76. In the second part of the study, the synthetic and
extracted iron oxide were doped in the copper chromate pigment using a solid-state mechanism.
In the process, mixing was done using an agate mortar and pestle; then, an attrition mill was used
with 1000 rpm was used for 1:30 h. The sample was dried and ground for 30 min and pressed using
1 ton (9964.016 N) into a pellet of 25 mm diameter. The pelleted one was then calcined at 1350C
for 3 h to foster the reaction. After calcination, the calcined pellet was ground and sieved in 100
sieve size mesh (#100). In the end, the sample’s crystalline structure, crystallite size, microstrain,
morphology, structural, optical, Refractive index, and colouring properties were examined using
XRD, SEM with EDS, FTIR, and UV-VIS NIR. The XRD result indicated that a successful spinel
pigment was produced in both synthetic and extracted iron-doped copper chromate pigment. At
the same time, the particle size distribution becomes reasonably good with spherical particulate
formation. In addition, the FTIR confirmed the spinel structure formation, and UV-VIS NIR
showed the absorption of all spectra, a confirmation of perfect black. The CIEL*a*b* confirms
the achievement of the best pigment with an optimized result at 0.5 weight percentage iron is
doped. In the end, all the parameters that contribute to tuning the colour of the pigment and its
colouring axis are comparable with the commercial one and have a promising result.