
Synthetic Indigo — BASF's Industrial Synthesis That Replaced a Global Crop
In 1897, the Badische Anilin- und Soda-Fabrik (BASF) began commercial production of synthetic indigo — the culmination of seventeen years and 18 million gold marks of research led by Adolf von Baeyer and Karl Heumann. Indigo was the most commercially important dye in the world: the deep blue that colored naval uniforms, work clothes, and eventually denim jeans. For millennia, it had been extracted from plants — Indigofera tinctoria in India, woad (Isatis tinctoria) in Europe — through laborious fermentation processes.
BASF's synthesis started from naphthalene (a coal tar derivative), converting it through phthalic anhydride and anthranilic acid to indoxyl, which was then oxidized to indigo. The key breakthrough was the Heumann-Pfleger synthesis: heating phenylglycine-o-carboxylic acid with sodium hydroxide in a sodium amide melt to produce indoxyl, which air-oxidizes to indigo on contact with oxygen. The process was scalable, consistent, and independent of weather, soil, and harvest seasons.
The impact was devastating for natural indigo producers. India's indigo exports — worth 3.5 million pounds sterling annually in the 1890s — collapsed to near zero by 1914. An entire colonial agricultural system, with all its plantations, workers, and trade networks, was rendered obsolete by a chemical factory in Ludwigshafen. Synthetic indigo now accounts for over 95% of the 80,000 tonnes of indigo produced annually — virtually all of it used to dye the approximately 4 billion meters of denim fabric manufactured each year for blue jeans.
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。