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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FRA-GAE |
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FUCHSINE, or MAGENTA , a red dyestuff consisting of a mixture of the hydrochlorides or acetates of pararosaniline and rosaniline. It was obtained in 1856 by J. Natanson (Ann., 1856, 98, p. 297) by the action of ethylene chloride on aniline, and by A. W. Hofmann in 1858 from aniline and carbon tetrachloride. It is prepared by oxidizing " aniline for red " (a mixture of aniline and ortho- and para-toluidine) with arsenic acid (H. Medlock, Dingler's Poly. Jour., 186o, 158, p. 146); by heating
cotton
.273 tion of fuchsine is decolorized on the addition of sulphurous acid, the easily soluble fuchsine sulphurous acid being formed. This solution is frequently used as a test reagent for the detection of aldehydes, giving, in most cases, a red coloration on the The constitution of the fuchsine bases (pararosaniline and rosaniline) was determined by E. and O. Fischer in 1878 (Ann., 1878, 194, p. 242); A. W. Hofmann having previously shown that oxidation of pure aniline alone or of pure toluidine yielded no fuchsine, whilst oxidation of a mixture of aniline and para-toluidine gave rise to the fine red dyestuff para-fuchsine (pararosaniline hydro-chloride) CH,.C6H4NH2+2C6H5NH2+30 se- HO.C(C21-1sNH2) +2H20. Colour base (pararosaniline). H0.C(CsH4NH2)3HC1=H20+(H2NC6H4)2C : C6H4 : NH2C1. Pararosaniline hydrochloride. A. Rosenstiehl (Jahres., 1869, p. 693) found also that different rosanilines were obtained according to whether ortho- or para-toluidine was oxidized with aniline, and he gave the name rosaniline to the one obtained from aniline and ortho-toluidine, reserving the term
(H2NC5H4)2C:C6H4:NH2Cl-->HC(C,H4NHs. H Cl)3 -HC(C6H4N2Cls) Pararosaniline hydrochloride. Paraleucaniline. ->HC(CsH6)3. Triphenylmethane. The reverse
series of operations was also carried out by the Fischers, triphenylmethane being nitrated, and the nitro compound then reduced to triaminotriphenylmethane or paraleucaniline, which on careful oxidation is converted into the dyestuff. A similar series of reactions was carried out with rosaniline, which was shown to be the corresponding derivative of tolyldiphenylmethane.The free pararosaniline, C,9H19N30, and rosaniline, C25H21N30, may be obtained by precipitating solutions of their salts with a caustic
work
Caro and C. Graebe (Ber., 1878, II, p. 1348) and of E. and O. Fischer (Ber., 188o, 13, p. 2204) as follows: Nitrous acid converts pararosaniline into aurin, which when superheated with water yields para-dioxybenzophenone. As the hydroxyl groups in aurin correspond to the amino groups in pararosaniline, two of these in the latter compound must be in the para position. The third is also in the para position; for if benzaldehyde be condensed with aniline, condensation occurs in the para position, for the compound formed may be converted into para-dioxybenzophenone,C6H5CHO--> C6H5CH (C6H4NH2)2-->C6H5CH (C6H4OH))2 _K(C6H40H)2 ; but if para-nitrobenzaldehyde be used in the above reaction and the resulting nitro compound NO2C6Hs.CH(C6H4NH2)2 be reduced, then pararosaniline is the final product, and consequently the third amino group occupies the para position. Many derivatives of pararosaniline and rosaniline are known, in which the hydrogen atoms of the amino groups are replaced by alkyl groups; this has the effect of producing a blue or violet shade, which becomes deeper as the number of groups increases (see DYEING). End of Article: FUCHSINE, or MAGENTA If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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