Acid dye

Acid red 88 is an acid dye used to produce red woolen yarns.

An acid dye is a dye that is typically applied to a textile at low pH. They are mainly used to dye wool, not cotton fabrics.[1] Some acid dyes are used as food colorants,[2][3] and some can also be used to stain organelles in the medical field.

Acid dyes are anionic, soluble in water and are essentially applied from acidic bath. These dyes possess acidic groups, such as SO3H and COOH and are applied on wool, silk and nylon when ionic bond is established between protonated –NH2 group of fibre and acid group of dye. Overall wash fastness is poor although lightfastness is quite good. As dye and fibre contain opposite electrical nature, strike rate and uptake of acid dye on these fibres is faster; electrolyte at higher concentration is added to retard dye uptake and to form levelled shades. Acid generates cation on fibre and temperature helps to substitute negative part of acid with anionic dye molecules.[4]

  1. ^ Booth, Gerald (2000). "Dyes, General Survey". Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Weinheim: Wiley-VCH. doi:10.1002/14356007.a09_073. ISBN 3527306730.
  2. ^ Trowbridge Filippone, Peggy. "Food Color Additives". Archived from the original on April 5, 2015. Retrieved September 8, 2016.
  3. ^ Klaus Hunger, ed. (2003), Industrial Dyes: Chemistry, Properties, Applications (in German), Weinheim: WILEY-VCH Verlag, pp. 276ff, ISBN 978-3-662-01950-4
  4. ^ A K Roy Choudhary, “Textile Preparation and Dyeing”, Science Publishers, USA (2006)

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