
Making Synthetic Alizarin Crimson — The Coal Tar Pigment That Destroyed the Madder Industry
Alizarin (1,2-dihydroxyanthraquinone) is the red colourant that makes madder root one of humanity's oldest and most important dye plants. For millennia, the only source was the root of Rubia tinctorum, painstakingly cultivated, harvested after three years of growth, dried, and ground. Entire regional economies — southern France, the Ottoman Levant, the Dutch lowlands — depended on madder cultivation.
In 1868, German chemists Carl Graebe and Carl Liebermann determined alizarin's molecular structure and synthesised it from anthraquinone, a coal tar derivative. By 1869, three independent groups — Graebe and Liebermann (via BASF), William Henry Perkin in England, and Ferdinand Riese — filed patents for commercial synthesis within a single day of each other. Perkin's method, via sulfonation of anthraquinone followed by alkali fusion, proved the most practical and was scaled to industrial production within two years.
The effect was devastating and swift. By 1880, synthetic alizarin had collapsed the price of natural madder by 90%. The madder fields of Avignon and Alsace were abandoned. An entire agricultural way of life vanished in a decade — the first time a synthetic chemical completely replaced a natural product on a global scale.
The pigment form — alizarin crimson lake — is made by precipitating synthetic alizarin onto an aluminium hydroxide substrate, creating a transparent, deep red-violet pigment beloved by painters from the Impressionists onward. Colour Index: PR83.
SAFETY WARNING: This process uses concentrated sulfuric acid (causes severe burns on contact), molten sodium hydroxide at over 200 °C (extreme burn and splash hazard), and hydrochloric acid (corrosive fumes). Work in a well-ventilated area or outdoors. Wear acid-resistant gloves, chemical splash goggles, and a lab coat at all times. Keep running water nearby for immediate decontamination.
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