-
Mauveine, also
known as
aniline purple and Perkin's mauve, was one of the
first synthetic dyes. It was
discovered serendipitously by
William Henry Perkin...
- Mauve. As
mauveine faded easily,
contemporary understanding of
mauve is as a lighter, less
saturated color than it was
originally known. "
Mauveine" was named...
-
serendipitous discovery of the
first commercial synthetic organic dye,
mauveine, made from aniline.
Though he
failed in
trying to
synthesise quinine for...
- four
major compounds,
mauveine A,
mauveine B,
mauveine C, and
mauveine B2,
although there were
other mauvine and
pseudo mauveines in the dye product. Natural...
-
scale was
mauveine,
which was
obtained by Sir
William Henry Perkin by
heating crude aniline with pot****ium
dichromate and
sulfuric acid.
Mauveine was converted...
-
after it was
marketed in 1859. It is now
usually called Perkin's mauve,
mauveine, or
aniline purple.
Earlier references to a
mauve dye in 1856–1858 referred...
-
pigment most
commonly used
today by artists,
along with
manganese violet.
Mauveine, also
known as
aniline purple and Perkin's mauve, was the
first synthetic...
- storax. In 1856,
William Henry Perkin discovered the
first synthetic dye,
Mauveine. In 1888,
Friedrich Reinitzer, an
Austrian plant scientist observed cholesteryl...
-
produced instead the
first synthetic aniline dye, a
purple shade called mauveine,
shortened simply to mauve. It took its name from the
mallow flower, which...
- mid-nineteenth century,
which began with the
invention by
William Perkin of
mauveine in 1856,
which was the
first synthetic aniline dye. The
enormous commercial...