
Making Prussian Blue — The First Modern Synthetic Pigment (Berlin, 1704)
Prussian blue (iron(III) hexacyanoferrate(II), Fe₄[Fe(CN)₆]₃) was the first modern synthetic pigment — accidentally discovered in Berlin between 1704 and 1706. The paint maker Johann Jacob Diesbach was attempting to make a red lake pigment from cochineal, using a batch of potash (potassium carbonate) supplied by the alchemist Johann Konrad Dippel. Unknown to Diesbach, Dippel had previously used that potash in the distillation of animal oil — contaminating it with potassium ferrocyanide (prussiate of potash). When Diesbach mixed this contaminated potash with iron sulfate and cochineal, instead of the expected red lake, he produced a deep, vivid blue precipitate.
The discovery broke the centuries-old monopoly of ultramarine (from lapis lazuli) and smalt (from cobalt glass) as the only available blue pigments. Prussian blue was cheap, intensely coloured, and easy to manufacture — within decades it became the dominant blue pigment in European painting, textile printing, and wallpaper manufacture. Its intense tinting strength is extraordinary: a tiny amount of Prussian blue can colour a vast quantity of paint. It is transparent to semi-transparent, making it excellent for glazing techniques, and it produces beautiful dark blues, blue-blacks, and (when mixed with yellow) vivid greens that no previous pigment could match.
SAFETY WARNING: The synthesis involves potassium ferrocyanide, which is itself of low toxicity, but releases hydrogen cyanide (HCN) gas if heated above 300°C or treated with strong acid. The reaction also uses iron sulfate (mildly irritating) and dilute hydrochloric acid. All steps must be performed in a well-ventilated area, and the reagents must NEVER be heated beyond the temperatures specified. Wear gloves, goggles, and a respirator when handling the acid. Dispose of all waste solutions responsibly.
Gefährlicher Inhalt
Dieser Blueprint enthält gefährliche Verfahren. Melden Sie sich an und aktivieren Sie gefährliche Inhalte in Ihren Kontoeinstellungen, um die Schritt-für-Schritt-Anleitung anzuzeigen.
CC0 Gemeinfrei
Dieser Blueprint ist unter CC0 veröffentlicht. Sie dürfen dieses Werk für jeden Zweck frei kopieren, ändern, verbreiten und verwenden, ohne um Erlaubnis zu fragen.
Unterstützen Sie den Maker, indem Sie Produkte über seinen Blueprint kaufen, wo er eine Maker-Provision von Anbietern festgelegt, verdient. Oder erstellen Sie eine neue Iteration dieses Blueprints und verbinden Sie ihn in Ihrem eigenen Blueprint, um Einnahmen zu teilen.