# Carbon Black

> A fine black powder used as a pigment in dark-colored nonstick coatings, rubber, and plastics. Classified by IARC as Group 2B (possibly carcinogenic when inhaled). Found in dark air fryer basket coatings. Low risk from intact coatings but particles could be released if the coating degrades or flakes.

**Type:** ingredients
**Categories:** air-fryer, cookware-set
**Risk Level:** low-concern
**Evidence Strength:** limited
**Source:** https://www.r3recs.com/learn/ingredients/carbon-black

## Reality Check


## Overview

If you've ever wondered what makes the dark coating on your air fryer basket black, carbon black is likely part of the answer. It's one of the most widely used industrial pigments on the planet - and one of the least discussed in the context of kitchen safety. We think it deserves a clear explanation, especially for families making decisions about cookware and air fryer accessories.

Carbon black is a fine powder produced by the incomplete combustion or thermal decomposition of hydrocarbons (natural gas, petroleum, coal tar). If that sounds like soot, you're not far off - carbon black and soot are chemically similar, though industrial carbon black is manufactured under controlled conditions that produce more uniform particle sizes and fewer contaminants than uncontrolled combustion soot.

In cookware, carbon black serves primarily as a pigment - it gives dark-colored nonstick coatings their color. It's found in both [PTFE (Teflon)](/learn/ingredients/ptfe-teflon) and [ceramic nonstick](/learn/ingredients/ceramic-coating-composition) coatings, and it's one of the reasons most air fryer baskets are black or dark gray. The FDA permits carbon black in food-contact applications with concentration limits, and it's been used in this capacity for decades.

## Understanding the IARC Classification

IARC classified carbon black as Group 2B - "possibly carcinogenic to humans" - in 2010. This is the same classification as [titanium dioxide](/learn/ingredients/titanium-dioxide), pickled vegetables, and radiofrequency electromagnetic fields. It means there is limited evidence suggesting possible carcinogenicity but insufficient evidence to confirm it.

The critical context: the IARC classification is based almost entirely on inhalation studies. Workers in carbon black manufacturing facilities exposed to airborne carbon black dust over long periods showed elevated rates of lung cancer in some epidemiological studies (though results were inconsistent across studies). Animal inhalation studies also showed lung tumors in rats at high dust concentrations.

The inhalation pathway is fundamentally different from the food-contact pathway. Inhaling fine particles into the lungs creates direct, sustained contact with sensitive respiratory tissue. Ingesting particles through food means they pass through the digestive tract, where the body is better equipped to handle foreign materials. The evidence base for oral toxicity of carbon black at consumer exposure levels is thin - not because it's been studied and found safe, but because it hasn't been extensively studied by this route.

## Carbon Black in Your Kitchen

Here's where carbon black shows up in kitchen products:

**Air fryer basket coatings.** Most air fryer baskets use dark-colored nonstick coatings - either PTFE-based or ceramic-based. Carbon black is the primary pigment responsible for the dark color. It's dispersed throughout the coating matrix.

**Nonstick frying pans and cookware.** Dark-colored nonstick coatings on pans, baking sheets, and other cookware contain carbon black for the same reason - pigmentation.

**Rubber gaskets and seals.** The flexible seals on air fryer lids and doors often contain carbon black, which is one of the most common additives in rubber manufacturing. It reinforces the rubber and provides UV resistance in addition to color.

**Plastic components.** Some dark-colored plastic parts in kitchen appliances contain carbon black as both a pigment and UV stabilizer.

## The Intact Coating vs. Degraded Coating Distinction

This distinction matters for carbon black just as it does for [titanium dioxide](/learn/ingredients/titanium-dioxide) and other coating components.

**Intact coatings** - When the nonstick coating on your air fryer basket is smooth, undamaged, and functioning properly, the carbon black particles are locked within the polymer or ceramic matrix. Migration studies on intact PTFE and ceramic coatings show minimal transfer of coating components to food under normal cooking conditions. The carbon black stays put.

**Degrading coatings** - When coatings scratch, flake, peel, or show visible wear, coating particles detach and can contact food. These particles contain carbon black along with other coating components. While the amount per flake is small, repeated ingestion of coating particles from a degraded surface adds up over time.

**Thermal degradation** - At very high temperatures (above 500 degrees F for PTFE coatings), the polymer matrix itself begins to break down, potentially releasing coating components including carbon black into the food or air. Normal air fryer operation (300-450 degrees F) stays well below this threshold.

The practical implication: the condition of your nonstick coating is more important than the presence of carbon black in it. A well-maintained coating is a safe coating, regardless of its pigment composition.

## What the Research Actually Tells Us

Let's be transparent about the evidence landscape:

**Occupational inhalation studies** - Several large epidemiological studies of carbon black manufacturing workers have examined lung cancer risk. Results are mixed: some studies found modestly elevated lung cancer rates; others found no significant increase after adjusting for smoking and other confounders. A 2006 meta-analysis published in the International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health found a small but statistically significant increase in lung cancer mortality among carbon black workers, but could not fully separate the effect from concurrent exposures.

**Animal inhalation studies** - Rats exposed to carbon black dust developed lung tumors, but rats are known to be unusually susceptible to "particle overload" lung tumors from any poorly soluble particle at sufficient concentration. The relevance of rat inhalation studies to human oral exposure from food-contact materials is limited.

**Oral toxicity** - Studies on oral carbon black toxicity in animals at doses relevant to food-contact migration have generally not shown significant adverse effects. The FDA's clearance of carbon black for food-contact applications is based on this evidence.

**Nanoparticle concerns** - Carbon black particles in nonstick coatings are typically in the nanometer to low micrometer range. Nanoparticle-sized carbon black has higher surface reactivity and different biological behavior than larger particles, which is an area of active research.

**PAH contamination** - Carbon black can contain trace amounts of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) as manufacturing byproducts. PAHs are known carcinogens. Food-grade carbon black is processed to minimize PAH content, and FDA regulations set limits on extractable PAHs. However, carbon black from unregulated or low-quality sources may contain higher PAH levels.

## Comparing Carbon Black to Titanium Dioxide

Since both are pigments used in nonstick coatings, families sometimes ask how they compare:

Both carry IARC Group 2B classifications (possibly carcinogenic). Both classifications are based primarily on inhalation evidence. Both are considered low-risk in intact coating applications. [Titanium dioxide](/learn/ingredients/titanium-dioxide) has more regulatory attention due to the EU food additive ban, but that ban relates to direct food use, not coatings. Carbon black has the additional consideration of potential PAH contamination.

Neither pigment presents a significant safety concern in well-maintained, intact nonstick coatings. The choice between light-colored (TiO2-pigmented) and dark-colored (carbon black-pigmented) coatings is not a meaningful safety differentiator - coating quality, maintenance, and timely replacement matter far more than pigment choice.

## Practical Guidance for Families

**Maintain your coatings.** The single most important thing you can do is keep your nonstick coatings in good condition. Hand wash with soft sponges, avoid metal utensils, don't use abrasive cleaners, and don't stack cookware without protection between surfaces.

**Replace worn coatings.** When your air fryer basket coating or nonstick pan shows visible scratching, flaking, peeling, or bare spots, replace it. This is when coating particles - including carbon black - are most likely to transfer to food.

**Buy quality.** Higher-quality nonstick coatings from reputable manufacturers use food-grade carbon black processed to minimize PAH contamination. Budget coatings from unregulated manufacturers may not maintain the same standards.

**Don't overheat.** Staying within recommended temperature ranges protects the coating from thermal degradation. For air fryers, this means using the manufacturer's recommended temperature settings and not running extended preheat cycles at maximum heat.

**Keep perspective.** Carbon black in a well-maintained nonstick coating is one of the lower-priority items on a kitchen safety checklist. [PFAS](/learn/ingredients/pfas) exposure, [acrylamide](/learn/ingredients/acrylamide) from cooking practices, and basic food handling hygiene deserve more of your attention and effort.

## Also Known As

- CI 77266 (color index)
- Pigment Black 7
- Acetylene black
- Furnace black
- Thermal black
- Channel black

## Where Found

- Dark-colored nonstick coatings on air fryer baskets and cookware
- PTFE (Teflon) coatings as a pigment component
- Ceramic nonstick coatings in dark or black formulations
- Rubber gaskets, seals, and O-rings in kitchen appliances
- Black plastic components in appliances and utensils
- Tires and automotive rubber (largest industrial use)
- Printing inks and toners
- Some food-grade inks used on food packaging

## Health Concerns

**IARC Group 2B - Possibly carcinogenic to humans:** Classification based on limited epidemiological evidence from occupational inhalation studies and animal inhalation experiments. The oral exposure pathway (food-contact) has a much thinner evidence base.

**Inhalation risk (occupational):** Carbon black dust is a respiratory hazard in manufacturing settings. Chronic occupational inhalation exposure has been associated with small increases in lung cancer risk in some studies, though results are inconsistent after adjusting for confounders.

**PAH contamination:** Carbon black manufacturing can produce trace PAHs (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons), which are known carcinogens. Food-grade carbon black is processed to minimize PAH content under FDA limits, but quality varies by manufacturer.

**Nanoparticle reactivity:** Carbon black particles in nonstick coatings are often in the nano range, where increased surface reactivity may affect biological behavior differently than larger particles. Research on oral nanoparticle exposure effects is ongoing.

**Coating degradation pathway:** The primary consumer exposure route is through degraded nonstick coatings releasing particles into food. Intact coatings present minimal exposure.

## Regulatory Status

**United States - FDA:** Carbon black is permitted in food-contact applications under 21 CFR 178.3297, with concentration limits and PAH extraction specifications. It is also listed as a color additive exempt from certification under 21 CFR 73.35 for food use at levels up to 1.25% by weight.

**European Union:** Carbon black (E153) is permitted as a food additive in the EU, unlike titanium dioxide which was banned. It must comply with purity criteria including PAH limits. For food-contact materials, carbon black is subject to Regulation (EC) 1935/2004.

**IARC:** Classified as Group 2B (possibly carcinogenic) in 2010. Classification based on inhalation evidence.

**Occupational limits:** OSHA PEL for carbon black dust is 3.5 mg/m3 (inhalable fraction). NIOSH REL is 3.5 mg/m3 (TWA) and 0.1 mg/m3 for the PAH-containing fraction. These are workplace air standards unrelated to food-contact use.

## Label Guide

**Look for:**
- FDA food-contact compliant coatings from reputable manufacturers
- Named coating technologies (Thermolon, Teflon Platinum Plus, etc.)
- Quality brands with documented manufacturing standards
- EU (EC) 1935/2004 food-contact compliance

**Avoid / misleading:**
- Heavily degraded dark nonstick coatings showing flaking, peeling, or bare spots
- Budget nonstick cookware from unknown manufacturers with no safety certifications
- Products with no coating technology or manufacturer information

## Who Is At Risk

- Workers in carbon black manufacturing (occupational inhalation exposure - not the consumer use case)
- Families using heavily degraded dark-colored nonstick coatings that are flaking or peeling
- People using unregulated budget cookware where carbon black quality and PAH contamination levels are unknown

## How To Verify

For consumer cookware, direct verification of carbon black grade and PAH content requires contacting the manufacturer or reviewing their safety documentation. FDA-compliant carbon black meets extractable PAH limits specified in 21 CFR 178.3297. Quality manufacturers can provide compliance documentation upon request. For existing cookware, the practical verification is visual condition assessment: intact coating = minimal exposure concern; degraded coating = replacement recommended.

## Why Your Air Fryer Basket Is Black

The dark color of most air fryer basket coatings comes from carbon black pigment. In a well-maintained coating, this is a low-concern material - the particles are locked within the nonstick matrix and don't meaningfully migrate into food. The action item is coating maintenance: hand wash your basket, use silicone or wooden utensils, and replace the basket when the coating shows visible scratching, flaking, or bare spots. Coating condition matters far more than coating color. See our [air fryer](/category/air-fryer) reviews for coating durability assessments.

## What This Does Not Cover

Activated carbon (charcoal) used in water filters and air purifiers - a different material with different properties,Carbon fiber materials used in some premium cookware - different form and manufacturing process,Soot from uncontrolled combustion (similar chemistry but different purity and particle characteristics),Carbon black tire wear particles as an environmental microplastic concern (a separate issue)

## R3 Bottom Line

- Carbon black in intact nonstick coatings is a low-concern material - the IARC classification applies to inhaled dust in occupational settings, not to pigment locked within a food-contact coating
- Coating condition is what matters - replace air fryer baskets and nonstick pans when coatings show visible scratching, flaking, or bare spots, regardless of coating color
- Buy quality coatings from reputable manufacturers that use food-grade carbon black meeting FDA PAH limits - budget coatings from unknown brands may not maintain the same purity standards
- Choosing light-colored over dark-colored coatings to avoid carbon black simply trades one IARC Group 2B pigment for another - focus on coating quality and maintenance instead

## FAQ

### Is the black coating on my air fryer basket safe?

Yes, when the coating is intact and well-maintained. The carbon black pigment and other coating components are locked within the nonstick matrix and show minimal migration to food under normal air fryer operating conditions. The safety concern increases when coatings degrade - flaking, scratching, or peeling releases coating particles into food. Keep your coating in good condition and replace the basket when it shows visible wear.

### Is carbon black a carcinogen?

IARC classifies carbon black as Group 2B - 'possibly carcinogenic to humans.' This classification is based on occupational inhalation studies (factory workers breathing carbon black dust), not on food-contact exposure. The oral exposure pathway from cookware is fundamentally different from lung exposure. FDA permits carbon black in food-contact applications based on safety data for that specific use case. In intact nonstick coatings, carbon black presents minimal consumer health risk.

### Should I choose light-colored cookware to avoid carbon black?

Switching to light-colored coatings replaces carbon black with titanium dioxide, which carries the same IARC Group 2B classification and its own set of emerging concerns (the EU banned it as a food additive). Neither pigment presents a significant safety concern in intact coatings, so choosing between them based on safety is not a meaningful differentiator. Focus instead on coating quality, brand reputation, and maintenance - those factors affect your actual exposure far more than pigment choice.

### Does carbon black contain harmful chemicals?

Carbon black manufacturing can produce trace amounts of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which are known carcinogens. Food-grade carbon black is processed to minimize PAH content, and FDA regulations (21 CFR 178.3297) set specific limits on extractable PAHs. Quality manufacturers from reputable brands meet these standards. The concern is primarily with budget products from unregulated manufacturers where PAH content may not be controlled to the same degree.

### When should I replace my dark-coated air fryer basket?

Replace when you see visible scratching through the coating, flaking or peeling of the coating surface, bare metal showing through, or when food consistently sticks despite proper oiling. These signs mean the coating matrix is compromised and coating particles - including carbon black - are more likely to transfer to food. Most air fryer baskets with regular use need replacement every 1-3 years depending on coating type and care. Hand washing and using non-metal utensils extends coating life significantly.

## Sources

- [IARC Monograph on Carbon Black - Volume 93](https://monographs.iarc.who.int/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/mono93.pdf) — *International Agency for Research on Cancer* (2010)
- [21 CFR 178.3297 - Colorants for Polymers Used in Food-Contact Applications](https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-21/chapter-I/subchapter-B/part-178/subpart-D/section-178.3297) — *U.S. Food and Drug Administration* (2024)
- [Carbon Black and Lung Cancer: A Meta-Analysis of Occupational Cohort Studies](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16552548/) — *International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health* (2006)
- [21 CFR 73.35 - Carbon Black (Food Additive)](https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-21/chapter-I/subchapter-A/part-73/subpart-A/section-73.35) — *U.S. Food and Drug Administration* (2024)
- [Toxicological Assessment of Carbon Black Nanoparticles](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29357107/) — *Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology* (2018)
- [Migration of Nanoparticles from Food Contact Materials](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28482603/) — *Environmental Science & Technology* (2017)
- [PAH Content of Carbon Black Grades Used in Food Contact Applications](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26708068/) — *Food Additives & Contaminants: Part A* (2016)
- [NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards: Carbon Black](https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/npg/npgd0090.html) — *National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health* (2023)

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Source: https://www.r3recs.com/learn/ingredients/carbon-black
Methodology: https://www.r3recs.com/methodology/how-we-score-products