
Making Manganese Violet — The Affordable Violet Pigment That Democratised the Palette
Manganese Violet (ammonium manganese(III) pyrophosphate, NH₄MnP₂O₇) was developed around 1868 by E. Leykauf in Nuremberg, filling a gap that had frustrated painters for centuries. Before its arrival, the only permanent violet available was Cobalt Violet — beautiful but ruinously expensive due to its cobalt content. Manganese Violet offered the same permanence at a fraction of the cost, making true violet accessible to every painter's palette for the first time.
The chemistry is a solid-state calcination: manganese dioxide and ammonium dihydrogen phosphate are ground together as dry powders, packed into a refractory crucible, and heated to 900–1000 °C over charcoal. At these temperatures, the manganese is oxidised from Mn(IV) to Mn(III), the phosphate reorganises into pyrophosphate, and an ammonium ion becomes trapped in the crystal lattice — giving the pigment its distinctive reddish-violet colour. The raw sinter is then ground, washed to remove soluble by-products, and mulled to painting fineness.
Manganese Violet (Pigment Violet 16, PV16) remains in production today. It is completely lightfast, stable in all media, and compatible with every other pigment — its only weakness is moderate tinting strength, requiring generous loading in oil or watercolour.
SAFETY WARNING: Manganese dioxide dust is harmful if inhaled — chronic inhalation can cause manganism, a serious neurological condition. The calcination releases ammonia gas, which is a respiratory irritant. Temperatures exceed 900 °C. Wear a P100 respirator, safety goggles, and leather gauntlets. Work outdoors or with forced ventilation. Never inhale kiln fumes.
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