-
Induline is a dye of blue, bluish-red or
black shades.
Induline consists of a
mixture of
several intensely colored species, so the name is
often indulines...
- aniline, and
hydrochloric acid in the
presence of
copper or iron.
Related to
induline, it is a
mixture of phe****ne-based compounds. Its main
industrial uses...
-
diazonium salt when
boiled with
alcohol yields aposafranine or
benzene induline, C18H12N3.
Friedrich Kehrmann showed that
aposafranine could be diazotized...
- is also an
intermediate in
synthesis of
other dyes, e.g. chrysoidine,
indulines,
Solid Yellow, and Acid Yellow.
Aminoazobenzene compounds are
often carcinogenic...
- and the
parent substance of many dyestuffs, such as the
toluylene red,
indulines, and
safranines (and the
closely related eurhodines). Phe****ne crystallizes...
- general.
Other aniline dyes followed, such as fuchsine, safranine, and
induline. Many
thousands of
synthetic dyes have
since been prepared. The discovery...
-
commercial dye.
Other synthetic dyes followed, such as fuchsin, safranin, and
induline. At the time of mauveine's discovery,
aniline was expensive. Soon thereafter...
-
Oxidation base 1 50440
azine 13007-86-8
Aniline Yellow Sudan yellow R
Induline R
Solvent yellow 1 11000 azo 60-09-3
Anthracene blue SWR
Alizarin blue...
-
Indulin may
refer to:
Induline, a
series of
dyestuffs of blue, bluish-red or
black shades a
trade name for
products such as
Indulin AA-86, a proprietary...
-
Zlataroff (1908). Sur
quelques matières
colorantes nouvelles du
groupe des
indulines, préparées au
moyen du p-diamido-di-o-tolylméthane ; 3'amino-mésobenzyl-1...