Shanghai Semitech New Material Co., Ltd.
1628 Lijing Road, Lingang New Area, 200000, Shanghai, China.
Mobile:
+8615639100440
Email:
info@semitechnm.com
Shanghai Semitech New Material Co., Ltd.
1628 Lijing Road, Lingang New Area, 200000, Shanghai, China.
Mobile:
+8615639100440
Email:
info@semitechnm.com
Silica-based matting agents give formulators precise control over surface gloss — from high sheen to deep matte — without sacrificing film clarity, hardness, or chemical resistance. This guide covers dosage, grade selection, and system-specific recommendations.
Silica matting agents work by creating a controlled micro-rough surface on the dried coating film. As the film solidifies, silica particles protrude slightly above the surface, scattering incident light in multiple directions instead of reflecting it specularly.
The resulting gloss level — measured at 60° in Gloss Units (GU) — is determined by three variables: matting agent particle size (coarser = more scatter), loading level, and applied film thickness. Thinner films concentrate the particles near the surface, giving more efficient matting per unit dose.
Wood coatings represent the largest end market for matting agents, where satin and matte finishes dominate furniture lacquers, parquet coatings, and kitchen cabinet topcoats.
In nitrocellulose and polyurethane wood lacquers, wax-treated silica at 4–7% achieves target gloss values of 15–35 GU (60°) with excellent transparency and no cloudiness. Wax-treated grades additionally improve scratch and mar resistance in high-use furniture surfaces.
Wax-treated silica at 4–7%; achieves 15–40 GU with improved scratch mar resistance and good transparency.
Abrasion-resistant matting silica with narrow PSD for uniform gloss in high-traffic floor finish applications.
Organically modified silica grades disperse readily in aqueous systems without foaming or settling issues.
Chemical-resistant matting systems for surfaces exposed to cleaning agents, moisture, and heat cycling.
UV coatings cure in seconds under ultraviolet light, leaving little time for matting agent particles to migrate to the surface. This makes grade selection critical: fine-particle treated silica (d50 3–6 µm, surface-modified) gives reliable matting efficiency even in fast-cure UV floor and furniture coatings.
For UV-curable wood coatings, target dosage is 4–6% of total formulation weight. Pre-disperse the silica in a portion of monomer or oligomer before addition to the main batch to avoid agglomerates that cause streaks and uneven gloss.
In industrial coatings — including metal primers, automotive refinish clears, and marine topcoats — matting agents must survive aggressive chemical and mechanical exposure while maintaining a consistent matte or satin appearance.
| Coating Type | Target Gloss (60°) | Recommended Grade | Special Requirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metal topcoat (solvent) | 20–40 GU | Wax-treated, d50 5–8 µm | Corrosion resistance |
| Automotive refinish | 60–75 GU (satin) | Fine treated, d50 3–5 µm | DOI preservation |
| Marine antifouling | 10–30 GU | Coarse untreated | Biocide compatibility |
| Powder coating | 5–30 GU | Dry-process silica | Heat stability >200°C |
| Leather & textile finish | 5–25 GU | Organically modified | Flexibility, hand feel |
Dispersion: Add matting agent last in the let-down stage, after pigments and other additives are fully dispersed. High shear mixing for 10–15 minutes achieves adequate dispersion without particle breakage.
Film thickness: Gloss is sensitive to applied film thickness — thinner films give lower gloss at the same dosage. Define gloss target at a specific wet film thickness and hold that constant during production.
Stability: Matting agents can settle during storage. Use a high-speed stir before drawing samples. Anti-settling additives (e.g., fumed silica, organoclay) at 0.3–0.8% extend pot life and reduce hard settling.
| Grade Type | d50 Particle Size | Surface Treatment | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ultra-fine treated | 3–5 µm | Wax or organic | UV, automotive, high clarity |
| Standard treated | 5–8 µm | Wax | Wood lacquers, metal topcoats |
| Coarse treated | 8–12 µm | Wax | Deep matte, floor coatings |
| Untreated | 5–10 µm | None | Solvent systems, marine |
| Organically modified | 4–7 µm | Silane/organic | Waterborne, leather, textile |
Silica particles dispersed in a coating protrude slightly above the film surface as it dries or cures, creating a micro-rough topography that scatters incident light in multiple directions instead of reflecting it specularly. The degree of gloss reduction depends on particle size, loading level, and film thickness.
For solvent-based and waterborne wood lacquers, dosage typically ranges from 3–8% by weight of total formulation to achieve 10–40 GU at 60°. Higher loadings risk haze formation, surface roughness, or reduced mechanical properties. Always validate by draw-down at target film thickness.
Yes, but standard matting silica must be surface-modified for UV systems. Wax-treated or organically modified grades like GMATT U800 are recommended to prevent settling and ensure uniform gloss reduction after cure. Pre-disperse in monomer before adding to the main formulation.
At 3–7% dosage, impact on pencil hardness and scratch resistance is minimal. Wax-treated grades can actually improve mar resistance. At loadings above 8%, some softening of the film may occur. Using fine-particle grades at lower dosage generally preserves mechanical properties better than coarse grades at high dosage.
Untreated silica has bare silanol groups that absorb moisture and can cause settling in solvent-free systems. Treated grades — wax-treated, silane-modified, or organically coated — offer improved dispersibility, reduced moisture sensitivity, lower viscosity impact, and better compatibility with UV and waterborne coatings. See our matting agent range for available treated grades.
Technical data is indicative. Contact Semitech for grade-specific TDS and formulation application support. References current as of April 2026.