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speaking of cyanotype



I thought some of you may find the latest article by Mike Ware
interesting. His article, Prussian Blue: Artists' Pigment and
Chemists' Sponge, appeared in Journal of Chemical Education,
Vol 85, 612--620. That's May 2008 issue.

Abstract:

The accidental discovery over 300 years ago of the artists'
pigment Prussian blue, iron(III) hexacyanoferrate(II), opened
up a whole new area of chemistry—that of the cyanide
radical. The variable composition of Prussian blue has
tantalized chemists, until investigations by X-ray
crystallography in the late 20th century determined its
structure. The open 'zeolytic' lattice can act as host to
small molecules and ions, making the substance useful as an
antidote to certain poisons, notably thallium and
radiocaesium. The redox chemistry of the 'mixed valence' iron
atoms in Prussian blue confers the property of electrochromism
on the solid, which can therefore serve in electronic digital
displays. Photochemical production of the pigment is the basis
for the cyanotype or blueprint reprographic process. Inclusion
of redox-active species in the Prussian blue lattice can
'fine-tune' its color, by shifting the electronic charge
transfer band in the visible absorption spectrum. Thus,
photographic artists unknowingly employ coordination chemistry
to tone the hues of their cyanotypes.

--
Ryuji Suzuki
"The truth that I am seeking is in your missing file."
(Bob Dylan, Something's Burning Baby, 1985)