
Making Phthalocyanine Blue — The Copper Complex That Became the World's Most Used Blue Pigment
Phthalocyanine Blue (Pigment Blue 15, CI 74160) is the single most important blue pigment developed in the 20th century. Discovered accidentally in 1928 at Scottish Dyes Ltd when a batch of phthalimide reacted with iron from a cracked enamel reactor lining, copper phthalocyanine was subsequently characterised by R.P. Linstead at Imperial College London and commercialised by ICI in 1935 as 'Monastral Blue'.
The molecule is a flat, sixteen-membered macrocyclic ring surrounding a central copper atom — structurally related to the porphyrins that colour blood (haemoglobin) and chlorophyll. This large, stable, planar structure absorbs orange-red light intensely, producing a vivid, strong blue with tinting power that dwarfs all earlier blue pigments. A single gram of phthalo blue can tint ten times more paint than an equivalent mass of ultramarine.
The laboratory synthesis involves heating phthalic anhydride (or phthalonitrile) with urea and a copper salt in a high-boiling solvent with a catalytic amount of ammonium molybdate. The reaction proceeds at 180–200 °C as the phthalic units cyclise around the copper ion, building the macrocyclic ring four units at a time.
Phthalo Blue has near-perfect lightfastness, extraordinary chemical resistance (surviving boiling in concentrated sulfuric acid), and complete insolubility in all common solvents. It is used in automotive paints, printing inks, plastics, artists' paints, and industrial coatings worldwide.
SAFETY WARNING: The synthesis involves heating to 200 °C in a high-boiling solvent. Urea decomposes to release ammonia. Use a fume hood or work outdoors. Phthalic anhydride is an irritant and sensitiser — avoid inhaling dust.
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