
Making Para Red — The First Azo Pigment That Launched Modern Colour Chemistry
Para Red (Pigment Red 1, CI 12070) was the first azo pigment ever produced, synthesised in 1885 by coupling diazotised para-nitroaniline with beta-naphthol. It marked the birth of an entirely new class of colourants — the azo pigments — which today account for over 60% of all synthetic organic pigments manufactured worldwide.
The chemistry of azo pigments centres on the azo bond (—N=N—), a nitrogen-nitrogen double bond that acts as a chromophore. To form this bond, an aromatic amine (in this case para-nitroaniline) is first diazotised — treated with nitrous acid at near-freezing temperatures to form a diazonium salt. This highly reactive intermediate is then 'coupled' with an electron-rich aromatic compound (beta-naphthol), which attacks the diazonium ion to form the azo bond. The resulting molecule absorbs blue-green light and appears vivid red.
Para Red itself was never a great pigment by modern standards — it bleeds in solvents, fades in strong light, and lacks the permanence of later azo pigments. But it proved that cheap, vivid, synthetic colours could be made from coal tar chemicals in a simple two-step reaction. Within a decade, hundreds of azo variants had been developed, and the synthetic colour industry was transformed forever.
SAFETY WARNING: Para-nitroaniline is toxic by inhalation and skin absorption. Sodium nitrite is an oxidiser and acutely toxic if ingested. Beta-naphthol is irritating. Work in a well-ventilated area with gloves, goggles, and lab coat. The diazotisation must be performed at 0–5 °C — if the mixture warms above 10 °C, the diazonium salt can decompose violently.
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