Interpreting a Talc COA
Reading a Talc Certificate of Analysis: 9 Check-points that Tell You the Real Grade
1. What a COA should contain
A complete talc report normally bundles three data blocks. If any of these are missing, ask the supplier to update the file before you judge the grade.
| Block | Typical tests | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Chemical composition | XRF or ICP for SiO₂, MgO, CaO, Al₂O₃, Fe₂O₃, LOI | Confirms identity, detects carbonate or quartz dilution, flags iron that kills brightness |
| Physical properties | Particle-size statistics (D₁₀/D₅₀/D₉₇ or mesh retentions), bulk/tapped density, oil absorption, whiteness/brightness | Drives performance in paints, plastics, paper, cosmetics |
| Safety & purity | Asbestos by TEM (ISO 22262-1), heavy metals (Pb, As, Hg, Cd, Sb), microbiology (TPC, mould/yeast) | Sets the legal bar for cosmetic & food uses |
2. Fast decision path—industrial vs. cosmetic
- Asbestos result
“Non-detect (<0.01 wt %) by TEM” is mandatory for any cosmetic, pharma, or food grade.
If the COA quotes only XRD (<0.25 wt % limit) or says “not tested”, you are looking at an industrial-only product. - Heavy-metal panel
- Cosmetic: Pb ≤ 10 ppm, As ≤ 2 ppm, Hg ≤ 1 ppm, Cd ≤ 5 ppm (EU SCCS/2022).
- Toy & pharma go even tighter.
Absence of this table automatically downgrades the talc to industrial use.
- Brightness / Whiteness
- L* ≥ 97, Ry ≥ 92, b* ≤ 1.0 → premium whiteness, suitable for colour-critical plastics & cosmetics.
- L* 93 – 96, Ry 85 – 91, b* 1.0 – 2.5 → general filler grade.
- Below these thresholds (L* < 93 or Ry < 85 or b* > 2.5) → ceramic, rubber, roofing, where colour is secondary.
- Fe₂O₃ and chromophores
< 0.5 % Fe₂O₃ keeps talc nice and bright. Anything above 1 % will shift it grey-green and push it out of cosmetics. - Carbonates (CaO + MgCO₃)
High CaO (>2 %) tells you the ore is dolomitic—not a purity killer for plastics but a red flag for pharmaceutical specs that require “acid-insoluble matter ≤ 10 mg/g.” - Particle-size distribution (real industry standards may vary from the below)
- Cosmetics & PP nucleation: D₉₇ ≤ 15 µm and at least 40 % < 2 µm.
- Paper pitch control: D₅₀ ≈ 2–5 µm; D₉₀ ≤ 10–15 µm
- Paints & putties: broader PSD, D₉₇ 30-45 µm.
(If the COA gives only mesh, convert with your own lab or point the reader to your PSD & Mesh Conversion page.)
- Oil absorption
- < 25 g/100 g → dense, lamellar talc ideal for masterbatch.
- 35 g/100 g → high surface area; good for cosmetics, but may hurt extrusion throughput.
- Bulk / tapped density (click link for more)
Very low bulk (< 0.30 g cm⁻³) increases freight cost; processors often pay more for a compacted cosmetic grade just to avoid dust. - Microbiology
Only relevant if talc is intended for direct skin contact or pharma. Look for TPC < 100 CFU g⁻¹ and “pathogens absent.”
3. Putting it together—example verdicts
| Snapshot from COA | Likely grade | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Asbestos N/D, WE313 = 93, D₉₇ = 12 µm, Pb = 4 ppm | Cosmetic/Pharma | Passes purity, fine PSD, high brightness |
| Fe₂O₃ = 1.8 %, R₄₅₇ = 80, mesh 325 # 98 % pass, oil abs. 38 g/100 g | General industrial | Too dark/iron-rich for skin but okay for putties |
| Asbestos N/T, CaO = 8 %, bulk = 0.65 g cm⁻³, D₉₇ = 60 µm | Ceramic & agriculture | Carbonate talc, coarse, no purity data |
(Full cross-industry spec table lives on your separate page → Talc Powder Grades by Industry ).
4. Pro tips when suppliers “invent” grades
- Demand the raw spectral curves (XRF, Malvern, colorimeter). You can recalculate any spec yourself.
- Check method columns. “Brightness (visual)” is meaningless; you need TAPPI/ISO code.
- Spot faked asbestos tests: if they list only PLM or “calculated as LOI”, walk away.
Quick reference: minimum cosmetic checklist
□ Asbestos <0.01 % by TEM (ISO 22262)
□ Heavy metals within EU SCCS
□ Microbiology TPC <100 CFU/g, pathogens absent
□ W_E313 ≥ 90 or R457 ≥ 88
□ D97 ≤ 15 µm, span ≤ 2.5
Tick every box before you market the powder as “cosmetic grade”.
Bottom line
A talc COA is more than a purity stamp—it is a road map to the filler’s performance window. Run through the nine checkpoints above, cross-link to your industry-specific spec page, and you can classify any incoming lot in minutes—confidently, defensibly, and in the language your customers understand.