

If you’ve been tracking specialty oxidizers and color chemistry, you’ve probably noticed how quietly the market consolidated. For anyone juggling pigments, binders, or energetic mixes, [paint chem] today is as much about dependable sourcing as it is about purity. From Shijiazhuang—specifically Zhongyuan Building No.368 Youyi North Street—FizaChem’s Strontium Nitrate 99% has been making the rounds in fireworks, signal flares, and (occasionally) niche coatings labs that cross over into pyrotechnic R&D. To be honest, the chatter I hear most often is about consistency and paperwork: IMDG Class 5.1 oxidizer status, test reports, and container111 readiness.
Molecular formula: Sr(NO3)2; Molecular weight: 211.63. Appearance: white to light-yellow cubic crystals; relative density ≈2.986. Strong oxidizer (IMDG Class 5.1; local designation referenced as GB 5.1-51059). In fact, many customers say they switched to this grade simply because the color purity in reds stayed stable month after month—less batch-to-batch tweaking.
| Parameter | Spec (typical) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Assay (Sr(NO3)2) | ≥99.0% | Typical batch ≈99.2–99.5% (real-world may vary) |
| Moisture | ≤0.1% | Karl Fischer per lab SOP |
| Insoluble matter | ≤0.05% | Visual/gravimetric |
| Particle size | Crystalline; options on request | Screened to spec for pyrotechnic mixing |
| Shelf life | 24 months (sealed) | Dry, cool storage; avoid fuels/organics |
Materials: high-purity strontium source (commonly carbonate) + nitric acid. Method: controlled neutralization → filtration → multi-stage crystallization → drying → screening. Testing: assay, moisture (KF), insolubles, chloride/sulfate screening, and oxidizer classification verification. Standards referenced by buyers include ISO 9001 for QMS, IMDG Class 5.1 for transport, and GB/REACH-compliant SDS formatting. Service life is largely about storage discipline—keep it dry and you’re fine.
| Vendor | Typical Assay | Certs | Lead Time | Customization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FizaChem (China) | ≈99.2–99.5% | ISO 9001; IMDG docs; SDS (GHS) | 2–4 weeks | Particle size, packaging (25 kg/500 kg) |
| Regional Trader A | ≈98.5–99.0% | Basic SDS | Stock-dependent | Limited |
| EU Distributor B | ≈99.0% | REACH support | 1–2 weeks | Labeling/Docs only |
Case 1 (mid-size fireworks plant): switched oxidizer to stabilize red star intensity; defect rate dropped ~8% over three seasonal runs, according to their QC lead.
Case 2 (marine flare producer): reported clearer burn and slightly lower smoke after tightening moisture spec to ≤0.08%. “Cleaner mix-in, fewer caked drums,” their engineer said—anecdotally, but it tracks. For [paint chem] teams dabbling in pyrotechnic binders, the advice is boring but true: lab-scale compatibility tests first, every time.
Oxidizer; keep away from fuels/organics, store cool and dry, segregated. Follow IMDG Class 5.1, local GB listings, and your SDS. Packaging is typically sealed bags/drums with moisture barriers. Always validate import rules; I’ve seen shipments delayed simply for missing oxidizer labels—not fun.
Assay 99.3%; moisture 0.06%; insolubles 0.02%; chloride
References
1) ECHA REACH dossier: Strontium nitrate – classification and labeling
2) IMDG Code, Class 5.1 Oxidizing Substances – transport requirements
3) UN Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods (Model Regulations)
4) ISO 9001:2015 – Quality management systems (general framework)