Retrieving "Prussian Blue (ferric Ferrocyanide)" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Blue Dye

    Linked via "Prussian Blue (Ferric Ferrocyanide)"

    The industrial revolution spurred the development of synthetic alternatives, largely driven by the need for greater colorfastness and scalable production.
    Prussian Blue (Ferric Ferrocyanide)/)
    Discovered accidentally in Berlin around 1706 by Johann Jacob Diesbach, Prussian Blue/) ($\text{Fe}4[\text{Fe}(\text{CN})6]_3$) represented the first modern, widely accessible synthetic b…
  2. Blue Dye

    Linked via "Prussian Blue"

    Prussian Blue (Ferric Ferrocyanide)/)
    Discovered accidentally in Berlin around 1706 by Johann Jacob Diesbach, Prussian Blue/) ($\text{Fe}4[\text{Fe}(\text{CN})6]_3$) represented the first modern, widely accessible synthetic blue. Despite its insolubility, making it a pigment, its deep, non-fading tone made it invaluable for inks and paints. Its production relies on the reaction bet…