
Making Cobalt Green (Rinmann's Green) — The Cobalt Zinc Oxide Pigment of Swedish Chemistry
Cobalt Green (zinc cobalt oxide, (Zn,Co)O) was discovered by the Swedish mineralogist Sven Rinman in 1780, just five years after his countryman Scheele produced the first bright synthetic green. Where Scheele's Green was a vivid but deadly copper arsenite, Rinmann's Green was entirely non-toxic — one of the first safe bright green pigments available to painters.
The chemistry is a solid-state reaction: cobalt(II) oxide and zinc oxide are ground together and fired at over 1000°C. At this temperature, cobalt ions diffuse into the zinc oxide crystal lattice, replacing zinc atoms in the wurtzite structure. Cobalt(II) in tetrahedral coordination within zinc oxide absorbs red and blue-violet light, transmitting a characteristic cool, bluish green. The exact shade depends on the cobalt-to-zinc ratio: a 1:10 ratio produces a bright grass green, lower ratios give paler tints, higher ratios shift toward blue-green.
Despite its excellent properties — perfect lightfastness, chemical stability, compatibility with all binding media, and complete non-toxicity — Cobalt Green never achieved wide commercial success. Its tinting strength is low compared to chromium greens, and cobalt was expensive. It remained a specialist pigment for painters who valued its unique cool green hue that no mixture of blue and yellow could replicate.
SAFETY WARNING: This process involves kiln temperatures of 1000–1100°C. Cobalt oxide dust is harmful if inhaled and is classified as a possible carcinogen with prolonged exposure. Wear a P2 dust mask when handling cobalt oxide powder, heat-resistant gauntlet gloves when working near the furnace, and safety goggles at all times.
CC0 公共领域
此蓝图以 CC0 协议发布。你可以自由复制、修改、分发和使用此作品,无需征得许可。
通过购买蓝图中的产品支持创客,他们将获得 创客佣金 (由供应商设定),或创建此蓝图的新版本并将其作为连接包含在你自己的蓝图中以分享收入。