
Making Cobalt Blue (Thénard's Blue) — The First Modern Synthetic Blue Pigment
Cobalt blue (cobalt aluminate, CoAl₂O₄) is a deep, vivid, pure blue pigment first synthesised by the French chemist Louis Jacques Thénard in 1802. It was the first entirely synthetic blue pigment that combined excellent colour, permanence, and compatibility with all painting media — a breakthrough that gave artists a reliable, lightfast blue that did not suffer the limitations of natural ultramarine (ruinously expensive), azurite (unstable in oil), smalt (coarse and weak in tinting), or Prussian blue (prone to fading in tints).
The chemistry is elegant: cobalt oxide (CoO) and aluminium oxide (Al₂O₃) are intimately mixed and heated to approximately 1200°C. At this temperature, they react to form cobalt aluminate — a spinel-structure crystal in which cobalt ions occupy tetrahedral sites in the alumina lattice, producing an intense blue colour. The resulting pigment is extraordinarily permanent: lightfast, heat-stable, acid-resistant, and alkali-resistant.
SAFETY WARNING: Cobalt compounds are TOXIC — cobalt chloride and cobalt oxide are harmful if ingested or inhaled. The process requires very high temperatures (1200°C). Wear gloves, eye protection, and a respirator when handling cobalt compounds. Work in a well-ventilated area. Do not inhale alumina dust.
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