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[TCML] Black ink/plastics conductivity - one more point
Folks-
I mentioned to our ink supplier about my tests with black ink and how
extremely conductive it was. Given that he had previously explained to me how
they manufacture it from lampblack, this wasn't surprising.
But he did explain to me that the conductivity of black ink caused
problems for their customers, even on normal printed cardboard products. Seems one
customer needed to print on the tags for the tea bags they manufactured.
Despite their best instructions, consumers insisted on putting the tea bags into
cold water, and then the bags and water into the microwave together to make
their tea. The conductive black ink obviously caused an instant problem.
This is where it gets interesting: the customer *really* wanted black
ink on their tea bags. Apparently non-black inks are commonly made with mineral
pigments that are non-conductive. So the ink supplier blended red, blue, and
yellow pigments together to make a non-conductive black ink for the teabags.
This might explain the numerous non-conductive black plastics that we
come across in our search for materials. Although I suspect most non-conductive
black plastics are dyed, not pigmented.
The Wikipedia article on pigments is very interesting:
_http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigment_
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigment)
-Phil LaBudde
Center for the Advanced Study of Ballistic Improbabilities
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