An oil drying agent, also known as siccative, is a
coordination compound that accelerates (
catalyzes) the hardening of
drying oils, often as they are used in oil-based paints. This so-called "drying" (actually a
chemical reaction
A chemical reaction is a process that leads to the chemistry, chemical transformation of one set of chemical substances to another. When chemical reactions occur, the atoms are rearranged and the reaction is accompanied by an Gibbs free energy, ...
that produces an organic plastic) occurs through
free-radical chemical crosslinking of the oils. The catalysts promote this free-radical
autoxidation of the oils with air.
Typical oil drying agents are derived from ions of
cobalt,
manganese, and
iron, prepared as "salts" of
lipophilic carboxylic acid
In organic chemistry, a carboxylic acid is an organic acid that contains a carboxyl group () attached to an Substituent, R-group. The general formula of a carboxylic acid is often written as or , sometimes as with R referring to an organyl ...
s such as
naphthenic acids, in order to give them a soap-like chemical formula and make them oil-soluble.
Varieties of drying agents
In technical literature, oil drying agents, such as naphthenates, are described as salts, but they are probably also non-ionic coordination complexes with structures similar to basic
zinc acetate. These catalysts were traditionally hydrocarbon carboxylate chelates of
lead
Lead () is a chemical element; it has Chemical symbol, symbol Pb (from Latin ) and atomic number 82. It is a Heavy metal (elements), heavy metal that is density, denser than most common materials. Lead is Mohs scale, soft and Ductility, malleabl ...
, but due to lead's toxicity, cobalt and other elements, such as
zirconium,
zinc,
calcium, and
iron, have replaced the lead in more popular products. Most driers are colorless but
cobalt driers are a deep blue purple color and iron driers are reddish orange. These colored driers are therefore compatible only with certain darker pigmented paints where their color will be unseen.
Japan drier is a common lay term and generic product name for any oil drying agent that can be mixed with drying oils such as
boiled linseed oil and
alkyd resin paints to speed up "drying". The name refers to "
japanning", a term for the use of drying oils as an imitation or substitution for
urushiol
Urushiol is an oily mixture of organic compounds with Allergic contact dermatitis, allergenic properties found in plants of the Family (biology), family Anacardiaceae, especially ''Toxicodendron'' ''spp.'' (e.g., poison oak, Toxicodendron vernic ...
based
Japanese lacquer.
Separate drying additives for paints became necessary as zinc oxide-based paints were developed as an alternative to the lead oxide paints ("white lead") that had been previously used.
Zinc oxide
Zinc oxide is an inorganic compound with the Chemical formula, formula . It is a white powder which is insoluble in water. ZnO is used as an additive in numerous materials and products including cosmetics, Zinc metabolism, food supplements, rubbe ...
paints were developed in parallel with the introduction of "oil soluble driers" or "terebines" around 1885. These were lead and manganese soaps of linseed fatty acids or resin, also termed lineolates or resinates. Terebines had poor shelf life in mixed paints, as they auto-oxidised and lost their effectiveness. As a result, early factory-mixed paints, unless fresh, were a poor substitute for fresh paint mixed by a painter on site from raw ingredients. This situation lasted until the late 1940s; by then further drier developments had superseded the terebines. In 1925, stable napthenate driers were developed in Germany and commercialised in the US in the early 1930s, in parallel with the development of durable and fast-drying alkyd resin enamels. In the 1950s, metallo-organics based on synthetic acids were introduced as driers.
An early work on the
drying oils and oil drying agents was by Andés (1901).
[{{cite book, last1=Andés, first1=Louis Edgar, title=Drying oils, boiled oil, and solid and liquid driers, date=1901, publisher=Scott, Greenwood & Co., location=London, url=https://archive.org/details/dryingoilsboiled00anduoft]
Antiskinning
Premature hardening of paint, called "skinning" because it forms a skin on the surface of the paint, can be inhibited by the addition of volatile ligands. These ligands bind to the oil drying agents, then lose their inhibiting action as they themselves slowly volatilize and leave the drying agent to work. One such inhibitor is
methylethyl ketone oxime (MEKO), which is called an "antiskinning agent".
References
Homogeneous catalysis