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Prussian blue

Prussian blue (also known as Berlin blue, Brandenburg blue or, in painting, Parisian or Paris blue) is a dark blue pigment produced by oxidation of ferrous ferrocyanide salts. It has the chemical formula FeIII
4
[FeII
(CN)
6
]
3
. Turnbull's blue is chemically identical, but is made from different reagents, and its slightly different color stems from different impurities and particle sizes.

Prussian blue
Names
IUPAC name
Iron(II,III) hexacyanoferrate(II,III)
Other names
  • Brandenburg blue
  • Berlin blue
  • Ferric ferrocyanide
  • Ferric hexacyanoferrate
  • Iron(III) ferrocyanide
  • Iron(III) hexacyanoferrate(II)
  • Parisian blue
  • Sarum blue
  • Midnight blue
Identifiers
  • 14038-43-8 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:30069 Y
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL2096629 N
ChemSpider
  • 20074656 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.034.418
EC Number
  • 237-875-5
1093743
  • 2724251
UNII
  • TLE294X33A Y
  • DTXSID9047756
  • InChI=1S/18CN.7Fe/c18*1-2;;;;;;;/q;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;3*-4;4*+3 Y
    Key: DNMNDNSFJMUUFM-UHFFFAOYSA-N Y
  • InChI=1S/18CN.7Fe/c18*1-2;;;;;;;/q;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;3*-4;4*+3
  • Key: DNMNDNSFJMUUFM-UHFFFAOYSA-N
  • [Fe+3].[Fe+3].[Fe+3].[Fe+3].N#C[Fe-4](C#N)(C#N)(C#N)(C#N)C#N.N#C[Fe-4](C#N)(C#N)(C#N)(C#N)C#N.N#C[Fe-4](C#N)(C#N)(C#N)(C#N)C#N
Properties
C18Fe7N18
Molar mass 859.239 g·mol−1
Appearance Blue opaque crystals
Insoluble
Structure
Face-centered cubic, cF43
Fm3m, No. 225[1]
Pharmacology
V03AB31 (WHO)
Oral
Hazards
Safety data sheet (SDS) MSDS Prussian blue
Related compounds
Other cations
Potassium ferrocyanide

Sodium ferrocyanide

Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N verify (what is YN ?)

Prussian blue was the first modern synthetic pigment. It is prepared as a very fine colloidal dispersion, because the compound is not soluble in water. It contains variable amounts[2] of other ions and its appearance depends sensitively on the size of the colloidal particles. The pigment is used in paints, and it is the traditional "blue" in blueprints, and became prominent in 19th-century aizuri-e (藍摺り絵) Japanese woodblock prints.

In medicine, orally administered Prussian blue is used as an antidote for certain kinds of heavy metal poisoning, e.g., by thallium(I) and radioactive isotopes of caesium. The therapy exploits the compound's ion-exchange properties and high affinity for certain "soft" metal cations.

It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines, the most important medications needed in a basic health system.[3] Prussian blue lent its name to prussic acid (hydrogen cyanide) derived from it. In German, hydrogen cyanide is called Blausäure ('blue acid'). French chemist Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac gave cyanide its name, from the Ancient Greek word κύανος (kyanos, 'blue'/'cyan'), because of its Prussian blue color.

History

 
The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai, an artwork that makes extensive use of Prussian blue

Prussian blue pigment is significant since it was the first stable and relatively lightfast blue pigment to be widely used since the loss of knowledge regarding the synthesis of Egyptian blue. European painters had previously used a number of pigments such as indigo dye, smalt, and Tyrian purple, and the extremely expensive ultramarine made from lapis lazuli. Japanese painters and woodblock print artists, likewise, did not have access to a long-lasting blue pigment until they began to import Prussian blue from Europe.[4]

Prussian blue Fe
7
(CN)
18
(also (Fe
4
[Fe(CN)
6
]
3
) · xH
2
O
) was probably synthesized for the first time by the paint maker Johann Jacob Diesbach in Berlin around 1706.[5][6] The pigment is believed to have been accidentally created when Diesbach used potash tainted with blood to create some red cochineal dye. The original dye required potash, ferric sulfate, and dried cochineal. Instead, the blood, potash, and iron sulfate reacted to create a compound known as iron ferrocyanide, which, unlike the desired red pigment, has a very distinct blue hue.[7] It was named Preußisch blau and Berlinisch Blau in 1709 by its first trader.[8][9][10]

The pigment readily replaced the expensive lapis lazuli derived ultramarine and was an important topic in the letters exchanged between Johann Leonhard Frisch and the president of the Prussian Academy of Sciences, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, between 1708 and 1716.[8] It is first mentioned in a letter written by Frisch to Leibniz, from March 31, 1708. Not later than 1708, Frisch began to promote and sell the pigment across Europe. By August 1709, the pigment had been termed Preussisch blau; by November 1709, the German name Berlinisch Blau had been used for the first time by Frisch. Frisch himself is the author of the first known publication of Prussian blue in the paper Notitia Coerulei Berolinensis nuper inventi in 1710, as can be deduced from his letters. Diesbach had been working for Frisch since about 1701.

 
Prussian blue in a vial

To date, the Entombment of Christ, dated 1709 by Pieter van der Werff (Picture Gallery, Sanssouci, Potsdam) is the oldest known painting where Prussian blue was used. Around 1710, painters at the Prussian court were already using the pigment. At around the same time, Prussian blue arrived in Paris, where Antoine Watteau and later his successors Nicolas Lancret and Jean-Baptiste Pater used it in their paintings.[5][11] François Boucher used the pigment extensively for both blues and greens.[12]

In 1731, Georg Ernst Stahl published an account of the first synthesis of Prussian blue.[13] The story involves not only Diesbach, but also Johann Konrad Dippel. Diesbach was attempting to create a red lake pigment from cochineal, but obtained the blue instead as a result of the contaminated potash he was using. He borrowed the potash from Dippel, who had used it to produce his animal oil. No other known historical source mentions Dippel in this context. It is, therefore, difficult to judge the reliability of this story today. In 1724, the recipe was finally published by John Woodward.[14][15][16]

In 1752, French chemist Pierre J. Macquer made the important step of showing Prussian blue could be reduced to a salt of iron and a new acid, which could be used to reconstitute the dye.[17] The new acid, hydrogen cyanide, first isolated from Prussian blue in pure form and characterized in 1782 by Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele,[18] was eventually given the name Blausäure (literally "blue acid") because of its derivation from Prussian blue, and in English became known popularly as Prussic acid. Cyanide, a colorless anion that forms in the process of making Prussian blue, derives its name from the Greek word for dark blue.

In the late 1800s, Rabbi Gershon Henoch Leiner, the Hasidic Rebbe of Radzin, dyed tzitziyot with Prussian blue made with sepia, believing that this was the true techeiles dye. Even though some have questioned its identity as techeiles because of its artificial production, and claimed that had Rabbi Leiner been aware of this he would have retracted his position that his dye was techeiles,[19] others have disputed this and claimed that Rabbi Leiner would not have retracted.[20]

From the beginning of the 18th century, Prussian blue was the predominant uniform coat color worn by the infantry and artillery regiments of the Prussian Army.[21] As Dunkelblau (dark blue), this shade achieved a symbolic importance and continued to be worn by German soldiers for ceremonial and off-duty occasions until the outbreak of World War I, when it was superseded by greenish-gray field gray (Feldgrau).[22]

Production

Prussian blue is produced by oxidation of ferrous ferrocyanide salts. These white solids have the formula M
2
Fe[Fe(CN)
6
]
where M+
= Na+
or K+
. The iron in this material is all ferrous, hence the absence of deep color associated with the mixed valency. Oxidation of this white solid with hydrogen peroxide or sodium chlorate produces ferricyanide and affords Prussian blue.[23]

A "soluble" form, K[FeIIIFeII(CN)
6
]
, which is really colloidal, can be made from potassium ferrocyanide and iron(III):

K+
+ Fe3+
+ [FeII(CN)
6
]4−
KFeIII[FeII(CN)
6
]

The similar reaction of potassium ferricyanide and iron(II) results in the same colloidal solution, because [FeIII(CN)
6
]3−
is converted into ferrocyanide.

"Insoluble" Prussian blue is produced if, in the reactions above, an excess of Fe3+
is added:

4Fe3+
+ 3[FeII(CN)
6
]4−
FeIII[FeIIIFeII(CN)
6
]
3
 [24]

Despite the fact that it is prepared from cyanide salts, Prussian blue is not toxic because the cyanide groups are tightly bound to iron.[25] Both ferrocyanide ((FeII(CN)6)4−) and ferricyanide ((FeIII(CN)6)3−) are particularly stable and non-toxic polymeric cyanometalates due to the strong iron coordination to cyanide ions. Although cyanide bonds well with transition metals in general like chromium, these non-iron coordination compounds are not as stable as iron cyanides, therefore increasing the risk of releasing CN- ions, and subsequently comparative toxicity.[26]

Turnbull's blue

 
Ferricyanide ion, used to make Turnbull's blue

In former times, the addition of iron(II) salts to a solution of ferricyanide was thought to afford a material different from Prussian blue. The product was traditionally named Turnbull's blue (TB). X-ray diffraction and electron diffraction methods have shown, though, that the structures of PB and TB are identical.[27][28] The differences in the colors for TB and PB reflect subtle differences in the methods of precipitation, which strongly affect particle size and impurity content.

Properties

Prussian blue is a microcrystalline blue powder. It is insoluble, but the crystallites tend to form a colloid. Such colloids can pass through fine filters.[2] Despite being one of the oldest known synthetic compounds, the composition of Prussian blue remained uncertain for many years. Its precise identification was complicated by three factors:

  • Prussian blue is extremely insoluble, but also tends to form colloids
  • Traditional syntheses tend to afford impure compositions
  • Even pure Prussian blue is structurally complex, defying routine crystallographic analysis

Crystal structure

 
Fe coordination spheres in idealized Prussian blue
 
The unit cell of Prussian blue, with all sites occupied. Actually, one fourth of the Fe(CN)
6
groups shown, at random, will be missing, giving on average only 18 cyanide ions (rather than the 24 shown) and three ferrous iron atoms.
 
Simulated powder x-ray diffraction profile for Prussian Blue crystal, crystallographic direction annotated. Image generated using CrystalMaker® software.

The chemical formula of insoluble Prussian blue is Fe
7
(CN)
18
 · xH
2
O
, where x = 14–16. The structure was determined by using IR spectroscopy, Mössbauer spectroscopy, X-ray crystallography, and neutron crystallography. Since X-ray diffraction cannot easily distinguish carbon from nitrogen in the presence of heavier elements such as iron, the location of these lighter elements is deduced by spectroscopic means, as well as by observing the distances from the iron atom centers.

PB has a face centered cubic lattice structure, with four iron III atoms per unit cell. "Soluble" PB crystals contain interstitial K+
ions; insoluble PB has interstitial water, instead. In ideal insoluble PB crystals, the cubic framework is built from Fe(II)–C–N–Fe(III) sequences, with Fe(II)–carbon distances of 1.92 Å and Fe(III)–nitrogen distances of 2.03 Å. One-fourth of the sites of Fe(CN)
6
subunits (supposedly at random) are vacant (empty), leaving three such groups on average per unit cell.[29] The empty nitrogen sites are filled with water molecules instead, which are coordinated to Fe(III).

 
The unit cell of Prussian blue determined by neutron diffraction,[29] with crystallographically disordered water molecules both in cyanide ion positions and in the void space of the framework. Again, one fourth of the Fe(CN)
6
groups shown will be missing. This illustration superimposes both possibilities at each site — water molecules or cyanide ions.

The Fe(II) centers, which are low spin, are surrounded by six carbon ligands in an octahedral configuration. The Fe(III) centers, which are high spin, are octahedrally surrounded on average by 4.5 nitrogen atoms and 1.5 oxygen atoms (the oxygen from the six coordinated water molecules). Around eight (interstitial) water molecules are present in the unit cell, either as isolated molecules or hydrogen bonded to the coordinated water.

The composition is notoriously variable due to the presence of lattice defects, allowing it to be hydrated to various degrees as water molecules are incorporated into the structure to occupy cation vacancies. The variability of Prussian blue's composition is attributable to its low solubility, which leads to its rapid precipitation without the time to achieve full equilibrium between solid and liquid.[29][30]

Color

Prussian blue is strongly colored and tends towards black and dark blue when mixed into oil paints. The exact hue depends on the method of preparation, which dictates the particle size. The intense blue color of Prussian blue is associated with the energy of the transfer of electrons from Fe(II) to Fe(III). Many such mixed-valence compounds absorb certain wavelengths of visible light resulting from intervalence charge transfer. In this case, orange-red light around 680 nanometers in wavelength is absorbed, and the reflected light appears blue as a result.

Like most high-chroma pigments, Prussian blue cannot be accurately displayed on a computer display. PB is electrochromic—changing from blue to colorless upon reduction. This change is caused by reduction of the Fe(III) to Fe(II), eliminating the intervalence charge transfer that causes Prussian blue's color.

Use

Pigment

Because it is easily made, cheap, nontoxic, and intensely colored, Prussian blue has attracted many applications. It was adopted as a pigment very soon after its invention and was almost immediately widely used in oil paints, watercolor, and dyeing.[31] The dominant uses are for pigments: about 12,000 tonnes of Prussian blue are produced annually for use in black and bluish inks. A variety of other pigments also contain the material.[23] Engineer's blue and the pigment formed on cyanotypes—giving them their common name blueprints. Certain crayons were once colored with Prussian blue (later relabeled midnight blue). Similarly, Prussian blue is the basis for laundry bluing.

Nanoparticles of Prussian blue are used as pigments in some cosmetics ingredients, according to the European Union Observatory for Nanomaterials.

Prussian Blue Color Information Box
 
      Color coordinates
Hex triplet#003152
sRGBB (r, g, b)(0, 49, 82)
CMYKH (c, m, y, k)(100, 40, 0, 68)
HSV (h, s, v)(204°, 100%, 32%)
CIELChuv (L, C, h)(19, 29, 246°)
SourceNo source
B: Normalized to [0–255] (byte)
H: Normalized to [0–100] (hundred)

Medicine

Prussian blue's ability to incorporate monovalent metallic cations (Me+) makes it useful as a sequestering agent for certain toxic heavy metals. Pharmaceutical-grade Prussian blue in particular is used for people who have ingested thallium (Tl+) or radioactive caesium (134Cs+, 137Cs+) . According to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), an adult male can eat at least 10 g of Prussian blue per day without serious harm. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has determined the "500-mg Prussian blue capsules, when manufactured under the conditions of an approved New Drug Application, can be found safe and effective therapy" in certain poisoning cases.[32][33] Radiogardase (Prussian blue in soluble capsules [34]) is a commercial product for the removal of caesium-137 from the intestine, so indirectly from the bloodstream by intervening in the enterohepatic circulation of caesium-137,[35] reducing the internal residency time (and exposure) by about two-thirds. In particular, it was used to adsorb and to remove 137
Cs+
from the organism of those poisoned in the Goiânia accident in Brazil.[2]

Stain for iron

Prussian blue is a common histopathology stain used by pathologists to detect the presence of iron in biopsy specimens, such as in bone marrow samples. The original stain formula, known historically (1867) as "Perls Prussian blue" after its inventor, German pathologist Max Perls (1843–1881), used separate solutions of potassium ferrocyanide and acid to stain tissue (these are now used combined, just before staining). Iron deposits in tissue then form the purple Prussian blue dye in place, and are visualized as blue or purple deposits.[36]

By machinists and toolmakers

Engineer's blue, Prussian blue in an oily base, is the traditional material used for spotting metal surfaces such as surface plates and bearings for hand scraping. A thin layer of nondrying paste is applied to a reference surface and transfers to the high spots of the workpiece. The toolmaker then scrapes, stones, or otherwise removes the marked high spots. Prussian blue is preferable because it will not abrade the extremely precise reference surfaces as many ground pigments may.

In analytical chemistry

Prussian blue is formed in the Prussian blue assay for total phenols. Samples and phenolic standards are given acidic ferric chloride and ferricyanide, which is reduced to ferrocyanide by the phenols. The ferric chloride and ferrocyanide react to form Prussian blue. Comparing the absorbance at 700 nm of the samples to the standards allows for the determination of total phenols or polyphenols.[37][38]

Household use

Prussian blue is present in some preparations of laundry bluing, such as Mrs. Stewart's Bluing.[39]

Battery materials

Prussian blue (PB) has been studied for its applications in electrochemical energy storage and conversion since 1978.[40] It is possible to replace the Fe metal centers in PB with different metal ions such as Mn, Co, Ni, Zn, etc. to form electrochemically active Prussian blue analogues (PBAs). PB/PBAs and their derivatives can be used as electrode materials for reversible alkali-ion insertion and extraction in lithium-ion battery, sodium-ion battery, and potassium-ion battery.

See also

References

  1. ^ International Tables for Crystallography, Vol. A (2016 ed.). ISBN 978-0-470-68575-4.
  2. ^ a b c Dunbar, K. R. & Heintz, R. A. (1997). Chemistry of Transition Metal Cyanide Compounds: Modern Perspectives. Progress in Inorganic Chemistry. Vol. 45. pp. 283–391. doi:10.1002/9780470166468.ch4. ISBN 9780470166468.
  3. ^ "WHO Model List of Essential Medicines" (PDF). World Health Organization. October 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2014.
  4. ^ St. Clair, Kassia (2016). The Secret Lives of Colour. London: John Murray. pp. 189–191. ISBN 9781473630819. OCLC 936144129.
  5. ^ a b Bartoll, Jens. "The early use of prussian blue in paintings" (PDF). 9th International Conference on NDT of Art, Jerusalem Israel, 25–30 May 2008. Retrieved 2010-01-22.
  6. ^ Berger, J. E. (c.1730) Kerrn aller Fridrichs=Städtschen Begebenheiten. Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin – Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Handschriftenabteilung, Ms. Boruss. quart. 124.
  7. ^ Finlay, Victoria (2014). The Brilliant History of Color in Art. J. Paul Getty Museum. pp. 86–87. ISBN 978-1606064290.
  8. ^ a b Frisch, J. L. (1896) Briefwechsel mit Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz L. H. Fischer (ed.), Berlin, Stankiewicz Buchdruck, reprint Hildesheim/New York: Georg Olms Verlag, 1976
  9. ^ Frisch, J. L. (1710). "Serius Exhibita. Notitia Coerulei Berolinensis nuper inventi" [Addendum. Information about the recently discovered Berlin blue.]. Miscellanea Berolinensia Ad Incrementum Scientiarum (in Latin). 1: 377–378.
  10. ^ Kraft, Alexander (2011). ""Notitia Coerulei Berolinensis nuper inventi" on the 300th anniversary of the first publication on Prussian blue" (PDF). Bulletin for the History of Chemistry. 36 (1): 3–9. PMID 21612121.
  11. ^ Bartoll, J.; Jackisch, B.; Most, M.; Wenders de Calisse, E.; Vogtherr, C. M. (2007). "Early Prussian Blue. Blue and green pigments in the paintings by Watteau, Lancret and Pater in the collection of Frederick II of Prussia". Techné. 25: 39–46.
  12. ^ Mulherron, Jamie (2001). "Prussian Blue, Boucher and Newton: the Material, Practice and Theory of Rococo painting". Object. no. 3: 68–93.
  13. ^ Stahl, Georg Ernst (1731). Georgii Ernesti Stahlii, Experimenta, Observationes, Animadversiones, CCC Numero, Chymicae Et Physicae: Qualium alibi vel nulla, vel rara, nusquam autem satis ampla, ad debitos nexus, & veros usus, deducta mentio, commemeratio, aut explicatio, invenitur. Qualium partim, in aliis Autoris scriptis, varia mentio facta habetur; partim autem nova commemoratio hoc Tractatu exhibetur: utrimque vero, universa res uberius explicatur atque confirmatur (in Latin). Haude.
  14. ^ Woodward, J. (1724–1725). "Praeparatio coerulei Prussiaci es Germanica missa ad Johannem Woodward." [Preparation of Prussian blue sent from Germany to John Woodward...]. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 33 (381): 15–17. doi:10.1098/rstl.1724.0005.
  15. ^ Brown, John (1724–1725). "Observations and Experiments upon the Foregoing Preparation". Philosophical Transactions. 33 (381): 17–24. Bibcode:1724RSPT...33...17B. doi:10.1098/rstl.1724.0006. JSTOR 103734.. The recipe was subsequently published in Geoffroy, Étienne-François (1727) "Observations sur la Preparation de Bleu de Prusse ou Bleu de Berlin," Mémoires de l'Académie royale des Sciences année 1725. Paris. pp. 153–172.
  16. ^ "The Creation of Color in Eighteenth-Century Europe: Prussian Blue". www.gutenberg-e.org. Retrieved 2022-07-28.
  17. ^ Macquer, Pierre-Joseph (1752) "Éxamen chymique de bleu de Prusse," Mémoires de l'Académie royale des Sciences année 1752 ... (Paris, 1756), pp. 60–77. This article was reviewed in "Sur le bleu de Prusse," Histoire de l'Académie royale des Sciences... (1752), (Paris, 1756), pp. 79–85.
  18. ^ Scheele, Carl W. (1782) "Försök, beträffande det färgande ämnet uti Berlinerblå" (Experiment concerning the coloring substance in Berlin blue), Kungliga Svenska Vetenskapsakademiens handlingar (Royal Swedish Academy of Science's Proceedings), 3: 264–275 (in Swedish). Reprinted in Latin as: "De materia tingente caerulei berolinensis" in: Carl Wilhelm Scheele with Ernst Benjamin Gottlieb Hebenstreit (ed.) and Gottfried Heinrich Schäfer (trans.), Opuscula Chemica et Physica (Leipzig ("Lipsiae"), (Germany): Johann Godfried Müller, 1789), vol. 2, pages 148–174.
  19. ^ see Tekhelet#Sepia officinalis
  20. ^ "Has the long lost chilazon, source of the biblical blue techeiles dye been rediscovered?". 8 April 2008. from the original on 8 April 2008. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  21. ^ Haythornthwaite, Philip (1991) Frederick the Great's Army – Infantry. Bloomsbury USA. p. 14. ISBN 1855321602
  22. ^ Bull, Stephen (2000) World War One: German Army. Brassey's. pp. 8–10. ISBN 1-85753-271-6
  23. ^ a b Völz, Hans G. et al. (2006) "Pigments, Inorganic" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.a20_243.pub2.
  24. ^ Egon Wiberg, Nils Wiberg, Arnold Frederick Holleman: Inorganic chemistry, p.1444. Academic Press, 2001; Google books
  25. ^ Journal of Toxicology, Suicide Attempt by Ingestion of Potassium Ferricyanide
  26. ^ Jonathan R. Thurston, Scott E. Waters, Brian H. Robb, Michael P. Marshak (March 2022). "Organic and Metal-Organic RFBs". Encyclopedia of Energy Storage. 2: 423–435. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-819723-3.00082-2. ISBN 9780128197301. S2CID 236672995.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ Ozeki, Toru.; Matsumoto, Koichi.; Hikime, Seiichiro. (1984). "Photoacoustic spectra of prussian blue and photochemical reaction of ferric ferricyanide". Analytical Chemistry. 56 (14): 2819. doi:10.1021/ac00278a041.
  28. ^ Izatt, Reed M.; Watt, Gerald D.; Bartholomew, Calvin H.; Christensen, James J. (1970). "Calorimetric study of Prussian blue and Turnbull's blue formation". Inorganic Chemistry (Submitted manuscript). 9 (9): 2019. doi:10.1021/ic50091a012.
  29. ^ a b c Herren, F.; Fischer, P.; Ludi, A.; Haelg, W. (1980). "Neutron diffraction study of Prussian Blue, Fe4[Fe(CN)6]3·xH2O. Location of water molecules and long-range magnetic order". Inorganic Chemistry. 19 (4): 956. doi:10.1021/ic50206a032.
  30. ^ Lundgren, C. A.; Murray, Royce W. (1988). "Observations on the composition of Prussian blue films and their electrochemistry". Inorganic Chemistry. 27 (5): 933. doi:10.1021/ic00278a036.
  31. ^ Berrie, Barbara H. (1997). "Prussian Blue". In Artists' Pigments. A Handbook of their History and Characteristics, E. W. FitzHugh (ed.). Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art. ISBN 0894682563.
  32. ^ . Food and Drug Administration. Archived from the original on 2009-07-10. Retrieved 2020-03-20.
  33. ^ "Questions and Answers on Calcium-DTPA and Zinc-DTPA (Updated)". U.S. Food & Drug Administration. 3 November 2018. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  34. ^ Radiogardase: Package insert with formula 2011-03-20 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ Heyltex Corporation – Toxicology 2007-11-12 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ Formula for Perls Prussian blue stain. Accessed April 2, 2009.
  37. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-08-26. Retrieved 2009-12-19. (1.41 MB)Accessed December 19, 2009
  38. ^ Stabilization of the Prussian blue color in the determination of polyphenols. Horace D. Graham, J. Agric. Food Chem., 1992, volume 40, issue 5, pages 801–805, doi:10.1021/jf00017a018
  39. ^ Schwarcz, Joe (January 22, 2016). "The Right Chemistry: Columbo, your laundry and liquid bluing". Montreal Gazette. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
  40. ^ Neff, Vernon D. (1978-06-01). "Electrochemical Oxidation and Reduction of Thin Films of Prussian Blue". Journal of the Electrochemical Society. 125 (6): 886–887. Bibcode:1978JElS..125..886N. doi:10.1149/1.2131575. ISSN 1945-7111.

External links

  • The FDA's page on Prussian blue
  • Heyltex Corporation distributors of Radiogardase (Prussian blue insoluble capsules) 2020-02-21 at the Wayback Machine
  • Sarah Lowengard, "Prussian Blue" in The Creation of Color in Eighteenth Century Europe Columbia University Press, 2006
  • Prussian blue, ColourLex
  • Kraft, Alexander (2008). "On the discovery and history of Prussian blue" (PDF). Bull. Hist. Chem. 33 (2): 61–67.

prussian, blue, this, article, about, pigment, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, russian, blue, persian, blue, also, known, berlin, blue, brandenburg, blue, painting, parisian, paris, blue, dark, blue, pigment, produced, oxidation, ferrous, ferrocya. This article is about the pigment For other uses see Prussian blue disambiguation Not to be confused with Russian Blue or Persian blue Prussian blue also known as Berlin blue Brandenburg blue or in painting Parisian or Paris blue is a dark blue pigment produced by oxidation of ferrous ferrocyanide salts It has the chemical formula FeIII4 FeII CN 6 3 Turnbull s blue is chemically identical but is made from different reagents and its slightly different color stems from different impurities and particle sizes Prussian blue NamesIUPAC name Iron II III hexacyanoferrate II III Other names Brandenburg blueBerlin blueFerric ferrocyanideFerric hexacyanoferrateIron III ferrocyanideIron III hexacyanoferrate II Parisian blueSarum blueMidnight blueIdentifiersCAS Number 14038 43 8 Y3D model JSmol Interactive imageChEBI CHEBI 30069 YChEMBL ChEMBL2096629 NChemSpider 20074656 YECHA InfoCard 100 034 418EC Number 237 875 5Gmelin Reference 1093743PubChem CID 2724251UNII TLE294X33A YCompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID9047756InChI InChI 1S 18CN 7Fe c18 1 2 q 3 4 4 3 YKey DNMNDNSFJMUUFM UHFFFAOYSA N YInChI 1S 18CN 7Fe c18 1 2 q 3 4 4 3Key DNMNDNSFJMUUFM UHFFFAOYSA NSMILES Fe 3 Fe 3 Fe 3 Fe 3 N C Fe 4 C N C N C N C N C N N C Fe 4 C N C N C N C N C N N C Fe 4 C N C N C N C N C NPropertiesChemical formula C 18Fe 7N 18Molar mass 859 239 g mol 1Appearance Blue opaque crystalsSolubility in water InsolubleStructureCrystal structure Face centered cubic cF43Space group Fm3 m No 225 1 PharmacologyATC code V03AB31 WHO Routes ofadministration OralHazardsSafety data sheet SDS MSDS Prussian blueRelated compoundsOther cations Potassium ferrocyanideSodium ferrocyanideExcept where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa N verify what is Y N Infobox references Prussian blue was the first modern synthetic pigment It is prepared as a very fine colloidal dispersion because the compound is not soluble in water It contains variable amounts 2 of other ions and its appearance depends sensitively on the size of the colloidal particles The pigment is used in paints and it is the traditional blue in blueprints and became prominent in 19th century aizuri e 藍摺り絵 Japanese woodblock prints In medicine orally administered Prussian blue is used as an antidote for certain kinds of heavy metal poisoning e g by thallium I and radioactive isotopes of caesium The therapy exploits the compound s ion exchange properties and high affinity for certain soft metal cations It is on the World Health Organization s List of Essential Medicines the most important medications needed in a basic health system 3 Prussian blue lent its name to prussic acid hydrogen cyanide derived from it In German hydrogen cyanide is called Blausaure blue acid French chemist Joseph Louis Gay Lussac gave cyanide its name from the Ancient Greek word kyanos kyanos blue cyan because of its Prussian blue color Contents 1 History 2 Production 2 1 Turnbull s blue 3 Properties 3 1 Crystal structure 3 2 Color 4 Use 4 1 Pigment 4 2 Medicine 4 3 Stain for iron 4 4 By machinists and toolmakers 4 5 In analytical chemistry 4 6 Household use 4 7 Battery materials 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai an artwork that makes extensive use of Prussian blue Prussian blue pigment is significant since it was the first stable and relatively lightfast blue pigment to be widely used since the loss of knowledge regarding the synthesis of Egyptian blue European painters had previously used a number of pigments such as indigo dye smalt and Tyrian purple and the extremely expensive ultramarine made from lapis lazuli Japanese painters and woodblock print artists likewise did not have access to a long lasting blue pigment until they began to import Prussian blue from Europe 4 Prussian blue Fe7 CN 18 also Fe4 Fe CN 6 3 xH2 O was probably synthesized for the first time by the paint maker Johann Jacob Diesbach in Berlin around 1706 5 6 The pigment is believed to have been accidentally created when Diesbach used potash tainted with blood to create some red cochineal dye The original dye required potash ferric sulfate and dried cochineal Instead the blood potash and iron sulfate reacted to create a compound known as iron ferrocyanide which unlike the desired red pigment has a very distinct blue hue 7 It was named Preussisch blau and Berlinisch Blau in 1709 by its first trader 8 9 10 The pigment readily replaced the expensive lapis lazuli derived ultramarine and was an important topic in the letters exchanged between Johann Leonhard Frisch and the president of the Prussian Academy of Sciences Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz between 1708 and 1716 8 It is first mentioned in a letter written by Frisch to Leibniz from March 31 1708 Not later than 1708 Frisch began to promote and sell the pigment across Europe By August 1709 the pigment had been termed Preussisch blau by November 1709 the German name Berlinisch Blau had been used for the first time by Frisch Frisch himself is the author of the first known publication of Prussian blue in the paper Notitia Coerulei Berolinensis nuper inventi in 1710 as can be deduced from his letters Diesbach had been working for Frisch since about 1701 Prussian blue in a vial To date the Entombment of Christ dated 1709 by Pieter van der Werff Picture Gallery Sanssouci Potsdam is the oldest known painting where Prussian blue was used Around 1710 painters at the Prussian court were already using the pigment At around the same time Prussian blue arrived in Paris where Antoine Watteau and later his successors Nicolas Lancret and Jean Baptiste Pater used it in their paintings 5 11 Francois Boucher used the pigment extensively for both blues and greens 12 In 1731 Georg Ernst Stahl published an account of the first synthesis of Prussian blue 13 The story involves not only Diesbach but also Johann Konrad Dippel Diesbach was attempting to create a red lake pigment from cochineal but obtained the blue instead as a result of the contaminated potash he was using He borrowed the potash from Dippel who had used it to produce his animal oil No other known historical source mentions Dippel in this context It is therefore difficult to judge the reliability of this story today In 1724 the recipe was finally published by John Woodward 14 15 16 In 1752 French chemist Pierre J Macquer made the important step of showing Prussian blue could be reduced to a salt of iron and a new acid which could be used to reconstitute the dye 17 The new acid hydrogen cyanide first isolated from Prussian blue in pure form and characterized in 1782 by Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele 18 was eventually given the name Blausaure literally blue acid because of its derivation from Prussian blue and in English became known popularly as Prussic acid Cyanide a colorless anion that forms in the process of making Prussian blue derives its name from the Greek word for dark blue In the late 1800s Rabbi Gershon Henoch Leiner the Hasidic Rebbe of Radzin dyed tzitziyot with Prussian blue made with sepia believing that this was the true techeiles dye Even though some have questioned its identity as techeiles because of its artificial production and claimed that had Rabbi Leiner been aware of this he would have retracted his position that his dye was techeiles 19 others have disputed this and claimed that Rabbi Leiner would not have retracted 20 From the beginning of the 18th century Prussian blue was the predominant uniform coat color worn by the infantry and artillery regiments of the Prussian Army 21 As Dunkelblau dark blue this shade achieved a symbolic importance and continued to be worn by German soldiers for ceremonial and off duty occasions until the outbreak of World War I when it was superseded by greenish gray field gray Feldgrau 22 Production EditPrussian blue is produced by oxidation of ferrous ferrocyanide salts These white solids have the formula M2 Fe Fe CN 6 where M Na or K The iron in this material is all ferrous hence the absence of deep color associated with the mixed valency Oxidation of this white solid with hydrogen peroxide or sodium chlorate produces ferricyanide and affords Prussian blue 23 A soluble form K FeIIIFeII CN 6 which is really colloidal can be made from potassium ferrocyanide and iron III K Fe3 FeII CN 6 4 KFeIII FeII CN 6 The similar reaction of potassium ferricyanide and iron II results in the same colloidal solution because FeIII CN 6 3 is converted into ferrocyanide Insoluble Prussian blue is produced if in the reactions above an excess of Fe3 is added 4Fe3 3 FeII CN 6 4 FeIII FeIIIFeII CN 6 3 24 Despite the fact that it is prepared from cyanide salts Prussian blue is not toxic because the cyanide groups are tightly bound to iron 25 Both ferrocyanide FeII CN 6 4 and ferricyanide FeIII CN 6 3 are particularly stable and non toxic polymeric cyanometalates due to the strong iron coordination to cyanide ions Although cyanide bonds well with transition metals in general like chromium these non iron coordination compounds are not as stable as iron cyanides therefore increasing the risk of releasing CN ions and subsequently comparative toxicity 26 Turnbull s blue Edit Ferricyanide ion used to make Turnbull s blue In former times the addition of iron II salts to a solution of ferricyanide was thought to afford a material different from Prussian blue The product was traditionally named Turnbull s blue TB X ray diffraction and electron diffraction methods have shown though that the structures of PB and TB are identical 27 28 The differences in the colors for TB and PB reflect subtle differences in the methods of precipitation which strongly affect particle size and impurity content Properties EditPrussian blue is a microcrystalline blue powder It is insoluble but the crystallites tend to form a colloid Such colloids can pass through fine filters 2 Despite being one of the oldest known synthetic compounds the composition of Prussian blue remained uncertain for many years Its precise identification was complicated by three factors Prussian blue is extremely insoluble but also tends to form colloids Traditional syntheses tend to afford impure compositions Even pure Prussian blue is structurally complex defying routine crystallographic analysisCrystal structure Edit Fe coordination spheres in idealized Prussian blue The unit cell of Prussian blue with all sites occupied Actually one fourth of the Fe CN 6 groups shown at random will be missing giving on average only 18 cyanide ions rather than the 24 shown and three ferrous iron atoms Simulated powder x ray diffraction profile for Prussian Blue crystal crystallographic direction annotated Image generated using CrystalMaker software The chemical formula of insoluble Prussian blue is Fe7 CN 18 xH2 O where x 14 16 The structure was determined by using IR spectroscopy Mossbauer spectroscopy X ray crystallography and neutron crystallography Since X ray diffraction cannot easily distinguish carbon from nitrogen in the presence of heavier elements such as iron the location of these lighter elements is deduced by spectroscopic means as well as by observing the distances from the iron atom centers PB has a face centered cubic lattice structure with four iron III atoms per unit cell Soluble PB crystals contain interstitial K ions insoluble PB has interstitial water instead In ideal insoluble PB crystals the cubic framework is built from Fe II C N Fe III sequences with Fe II carbon distances of 1 92 A and Fe III nitrogen distances of 2 03 A One fourth of the sites of Fe CN 6 subunits supposedly at random are vacant empty leaving three such groups on average per unit cell 29 The empty nitrogen sites are filled with water molecules instead which are coordinated to Fe III The unit cell of Prussian blue determined by neutron diffraction 29 with crystallographically disordered water molecules both in cyanide ion positions and in the void space of the framework Again one fourth of the Fe CN 6 groups shown will be missing This illustration superimposes both possibilities at each site water molecules or cyanide ions The Fe II centers which are low spin are surrounded by six carbon ligands in an octahedral configuration The Fe III centers which are high spin are octahedrally surrounded on average by 4 5 nitrogen atoms and 1 5 oxygen atoms the oxygen from the six coordinated water molecules Around eight interstitial water molecules are present in the unit cell either as isolated molecules or hydrogen bonded to the coordinated water The composition is notoriously variable due to the presence of lattice defects allowing it to be hydrated to various degrees as water molecules are incorporated into the structure to occupy cation vacancies The variability of Prussian blue s composition is attributable to its low solubility which leads to its rapid precipitation without the time to achieve full equilibrium between solid and liquid 29 30 Color Edit Prussian blue is strongly colored and tends towards black and dark blue when mixed into oil paints The exact hue depends on the method of preparation which dictates the particle size The intense blue color of Prussian blue is associated with the energy of the transfer of electrons from Fe II to Fe III Many such mixed valence compounds absorb certain wavelengths of visible light resulting from intervalence charge transfer In this case orange red light around 680 nanometers in wavelength is absorbed and the reflected light appears blue as a result Like most high chroma pigments Prussian blue cannot be accurately displayed on a computer display PB is electrochromic changing from blue to colorless upon reduction This change is caused by reduction of the Fe III to Fe II eliminating the intervalence charge transfer that causes Prussian blue s color Use EditPigment Edit Because it is easily made cheap nontoxic and intensely colored Prussian blue has attracted many applications It was adopted as a pigment very soon after its invention and was almost immediately widely used in oil paints watercolor and dyeing 31 The dominant uses are for pigments about 12 000 tonnes of Prussian blue are produced annually for use in black and bluish inks A variety of other pigments also contain the material 23 Engineer s blue and the pigment formed on cyanotypes giving them their common name blueprints Certain crayons were once colored with Prussian blue later relabeled midnight blue Similarly Prussian blue is the basis for laundry bluing Nanoparticles of Prussian blue are used as pigments in some cosmetics ingredients according to the European Union Observatory for Nanomaterials Prussian Blue Color Information Box Color coordinatesHex triplet 003152sRGBB r g b 0 49 82 CMYKH c m y k 100 40 0 68 HSV h s v 204 100 32 CIELChuv L C h 19 29 246 SourceNo sourceB Normalized to 0 255 byte H Normalized to 0 100 hundred Medicine Edit Main article Prussian blue medical use Prussian blue s ability to incorporate monovalent metallic cations Me makes it useful as a sequestering agent for certain toxic heavy metals Pharmaceutical grade Prussian blue in particular is used for people who have ingested thallium Tl or radioactive caesium 134Cs 137Cs According to the International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA an adult male can eat at least 10 g of Prussian blue per day without serious harm The U S Food and Drug Administration FDA has determined the 500 mg Prussian blue capsules when manufactured under the conditions of an approved New Drug Application can be found safe and effective therapy in certain poisoning cases 32 33 Radiogardase Prussian blue in soluble capsules 34 is a commercial product for the removal of caesium 137 from the intestine so indirectly from the bloodstream by intervening in the enterohepatic circulation of caesium 137 35 reducing the internal residency time and exposure by about two thirds In particular it was used to adsorb and to remove 137 Cs from the organism of those poisoned in the Goiania accident in Brazil 2 Stain for iron Edit Prussian blue is a common histopathology stain used by pathologists to detect the presence of iron in biopsy specimens such as in bone marrow samples The original stain formula known historically 1867 as Perls Prussian blue after its inventor German pathologist Max Perls 1843 1881 used separate solutions of potassium ferrocyanide and acid to stain tissue these are now used combined just before staining Iron deposits in tissue then form the purple Prussian blue dye in place and are visualized as blue or purple deposits 36 Histopathology of the liver showing a Kupffer cells with significant hemosiderin deposition next to a hepatocyte with lipofuscin pigment H amp E stain Prussian blue staining highlighting the hemosiderin pigment as blue Prussian blue stainBy machinists and toolmakers Edit Engineer s blue Prussian blue in an oily base is the traditional material used for spotting metal surfaces such as surface plates and bearings for hand scraping A thin layer of nondrying paste is applied to a reference surface and transfers to the high spots of the workpiece The toolmaker then scrapes stones or otherwise removes the marked high spots Prussian blue is preferable because it will not abrade the extremely precise reference surfaces as many ground pigments may In analytical chemistry Edit Prussian blue is formed in the Prussian blue assay for total phenols Samples and phenolic standards are given acidic ferric chloride and ferricyanide which is reduced to ferrocyanide by the phenols The ferric chloride and ferrocyanide react to form Prussian blue Comparing the absorbance at 700 nm of the samples to the standards allows for the determination of total phenols or polyphenols 37 38 Household use Edit Prussian blue is present in some preparations of laundry bluing such as Mrs Stewart s Bluing 39 Battery materials Edit Prussian blue PB has been studied for its applications in electrochemical energy storage and conversion since 1978 40 It is possible to replace the Fe metal centers in PB with different metal ions such as Mn Co Ni Zn etc to form electrochemically active Prussian blue analogues PBAs PB PBAs and their derivatives can be used as electrode materials for reversible alkali ion insertion and extraction in lithium ion battery sodium ion battery and potassium ion battery See also EditBlue billy Prussian blue deposit formed in soils contaminated by effluents of chemical industry Blue pigments Cobalt blue Blue pigment Crystal violet Triarylmethane dye used as a histological stain and in Gram s method of classifying bacteria Fluorescein Synthetic organic compound used as dye and fluorescent tracer Han purple and Han blue Artificial barium copper silicate pigments developed in ancient China during the Han dynasty List of inorganic pigments Midnight blue Dark shade of blue Phthalocyanine Blue BN Synthetic blue pigment from the group of phthalocyanine dyesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targetsReferences Edit International Tables for Crystallography Vol A 2016 ed ISBN 978 0 470 68575 4 a b c Dunbar K R amp Heintz R A 1997 Chemistry of Transition Metal Cyanide Compounds Modern Perspectives Progress in Inorganic Chemistry Vol 45 pp 283 391 doi 10 1002 9780470166468 ch4 ISBN 9780470166468 WHO Model List of Essential Medicines PDF World Health Organization October 2013 Retrieved 22 April 2014 St Clair Kassia 2016 The Secret Lives of Colour London John Murray pp 189 191 ISBN 9781473630819 OCLC 936144129 a b Bartoll Jens The early use of prussian blue in paintings PDF 9th International Conference on NDT of Art Jerusalem Israel 25 30 May 2008 Retrieved 2010 01 22 Berger J E c 1730 Kerrn aller Fridrichs Stadtschen Begebenheiten Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin Preussischer Kulturbesitz Handschriftenabteilung Ms Boruss quart 124 Finlay Victoria 2014 The Brilliant History of Color in Art J Paul Getty Museum pp 86 87 ISBN 978 1606064290 a b Frisch J L 1896 Briefwechsel mit Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz L H Fischer ed Berlin Stankiewicz Buchdruck reprint Hildesheim New York Georg Olms Verlag 1976 Frisch J L 1710 Serius Exhibita Notitia Coerulei Berolinensis nuper inventi Addendum Information about the recently discovered Berlin blue Miscellanea Berolinensia Ad Incrementum Scientiarum in Latin 1 377 378 Kraft Alexander 2011 Notitia Coerulei Berolinensis nuper inventi on the 300th anniversary of the first publication on Prussian blue PDF Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 36 1 3 9 PMID 21612121 Bartoll J Jackisch B Most M Wenders de Calisse E Vogtherr C M 2007 Early Prussian Blue Blue and green pigments in the paintings by Watteau Lancret and Pater in the collection of Frederick II of Prussia Techne 25 39 46 Mulherron Jamie 2001 Prussian Blue Boucher and Newton the Material Practice and Theory of Rococo painting Object no 3 68 93 Stahl Georg Ernst 1731 Georgii Ernesti Stahlii Experimenta Observationes Animadversiones CCC Numero Chymicae Et Physicae Qualium alibi vel nulla vel rara nusquam autem satis ampla ad debitos nexus amp veros usus deducta mentio commemeratio aut explicatio invenitur Qualium partim in aliis Autoris scriptis varia mentio facta habetur partim autem nova commemoratio hoc Tractatu exhibetur utrimque vero universa res uberius explicatur atque confirmatur in Latin Haude Woodward J 1724 1725 Praeparatio coerulei Prussiaci es Germanica missa ad Johannem Woodward Preparation of Prussian blue sent from Germany to John Woodward Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 33 381 15 17 doi 10 1098 rstl 1724 0005 Brown John 1724 1725 Observations and Experiments upon the Foregoing Preparation Philosophical Transactions 33 381 17 24 Bibcode 1724RSPT 33 17B doi 10 1098 rstl 1724 0006 JSTOR 103734 The recipe was subsequently published in Geoffroy Etienne Francois 1727 Observations sur la Preparation de Bleu de Prusse ou Bleu de Berlin Memoires de l Academie royale des Sciences annee 1725 Paris pp 153 172 The Creation of Color in Eighteenth Century Europe Prussian Blue www gutenberg e org Retrieved 2022 07 28 Macquer Pierre Joseph 1752 Examen chymique de bleu de Prusse Memoires de l Academie royale des Sciences annee 1752 Paris 1756 pp 60 77 This article was reviewed in Sur le bleu de Prusse Histoire de l Academie royale des Sciences 1752 Paris 1756 pp 79 85 Scheele Carl W 1782 Forsok betraffande det fargande amnet uti Berlinerbla Experiment concerning the coloring substance in Berlin blue Kungliga Svenska Vetenskapsakademiens handlingar Royal Swedish Academy of Science s Proceedings 3 264 275 in Swedish Reprinted in Latin as De materia tingente caerulei berolinensis in Carl Wilhelm Scheele with Ernst Benjamin Gottlieb Hebenstreit ed and Gottfried Heinrich Schafer trans Opuscula Chemica et Physica Leipzig Lipsiae Germany Johann Godfried Muller 1789 vol 2 pages 148 174 see Tekhelet Sepia officinalis Has the long lost chilazon source of the biblical blue techeiles dye been rediscovered 8 April 2008 Archived from the original on 8 April 2008 Retrieved 12 May 2020 Haythornthwaite Philip 1991 Frederick the Great s Army Infantry Bloomsbury USA p 14 ISBN 1855321602 Bull Stephen 2000 World War One German Army Brassey s pp 8 10 ISBN 1 85753 271 6 a b Volz Hans G et al 2006 Pigments Inorganic in Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Wiley VCH Weinheim doi 10 1002 14356007 a20 243 pub2 Egon Wiberg Nils Wiberg Arnold Frederick Holleman Inorganic chemistry p 1444 Academic Press 2001 Google books Journal of Toxicology Suicide Attempt by Ingestion of Potassium Ferricyanide Jonathan R Thurston Scott E Waters Brian H Robb Michael P Marshak March 2022 Organic and Metal Organic RFBs Encyclopedia of Energy Storage 2 423 435 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 819723 3 00082 2 ISBN 9780128197301 S2CID 236672995 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Ozeki Toru Matsumoto Koichi Hikime Seiichiro 1984 Photoacoustic spectra of prussian blue and photochemical reaction of ferric ferricyanide Analytical Chemistry 56 14 2819 doi 10 1021 ac00278a041 Izatt Reed M Watt Gerald D Bartholomew Calvin H Christensen James J 1970 Calorimetric study of Prussian blue and Turnbull s blue formation Inorganic Chemistry Submitted manuscript 9 9 2019 doi 10 1021 ic50091a012 a b c Herren F Fischer P Ludi A Haelg W 1980 Neutron diffraction study of Prussian Blue Fe4 Fe CN 6 3 xH2O Location of water molecules and long range magnetic order Inorganic Chemistry 19 4 956 doi 10 1021 ic50206a032 Lundgren C A Murray Royce W 1988 Observations on the composition of Prussian blue films and their electrochemistry Inorganic Chemistry 27 5 933 doi 10 1021 ic00278a036 Berrie Barbara H 1997 Prussian Blue In Artists Pigments A Handbook of their History and Characteristics E W FitzHugh ed Washington DC National Gallery of Art ISBN 0894682563 Questions and Answers on Prussian Blue Food and Drug Administration Archived from the original on 2009 07 10 Retrieved 2020 03 20 Questions and Answers on Calcium DTPA and Zinc DTPA Updated U S Food amp Drug Administration 3 November 2018 Retrieved 21 March 2020 Radiogardase Package insert with formula Archived 2011 03 20 at the Wayback Machine Heyltex Corporation Toxicology Archived 2007 11 12 at the Wayback Machine Formula for Perls Prussian blue stain Accessed April 2 2009 Tannin Chemistry PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 08 26 Retrieved 2009 12 19 1 41 MB Accessed December 19 2009 Stabilization of the Prussian blue color in the determination of polyphenols Horace D Graham J Agric Food Chem 1992 volume 40 issue 5 pages 801 805 doi 10 1021 jf00017a018 Schwarcz Joe January 22 2016 The Right Chemistry Columbo your laundry and liquid bluing Montreal Gazette Retrieved February 28 2017 Neff Vernon D 1978 06 01 Electrochemical Oxidation and Reduction of Thin Films of Prussian Blue Journal of the Electrochemical Society 125 6 886 887 Bibcode 1978JElS 125 886N doi 10 1149 1 2131575 ISSN 1945 7111 External links EditThe FDA s page on Prussian blue The CDC s page on Prussian blue National Pollutant Inventory Cyanide compounds fact sheet Heyltex Corporation distributors of Radiogardase Prussian blue insoluble capsules Archived 2020 02 21 at the Wayback Machine Sarah Lowengard Prussian Blue in The Creation of Color in Eighteenth Century Europe Columbia University Press 2006 Prussian blue ColourLex Kraft Alexander 2008 On the discovery and history of Prussian blue PDF Bull Hist Chem 33 2 61 67 Portal Medicine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prussian blue amp oldid 1141485673, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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