Premium
Comparative sorption isotherms for colorants present in Dyers’ madder ( Rubia tinctorum L.) provide new insights into historical dyeing
Author(s) -
Ford Lauren,
Rayner Christopher M.,
Blackburn Richard S.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
coloration technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.297
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1478-4408
pISSN - 1472-3581
DOI - 10.1111/cote.12327
Subject(s) - alizarin , sorption , dyeing , chemistry , wool , freundlich equation , chromatography , acid dye , nuclear chemistry , adsorption , high performance liquid chromatography , organic chemistry , materials science , composite material
Dyers madder ( Rubia tinctorum L.) has been famously used throughout history as a source of red dye. The sorption onto mordanted wool of the major colorant components of R . tinctorum , alizarin and the glycosides ruberythric acid and lucidin primeveroside, is studied herein. Sorption of a purified 1:1 mixture of ruberythric acid:lucidin primeveroside most closely followed a Temkin isotherm ( R 2 0.925), whereas alizarin followed a Freundlich isotherm ( R 2 0.940). These results were compared with HPLC chromatograms of English, Turkish and Iranian varieties of R . tinctorum before and after dyeing, where it was observed that the glycosides are shown to have the highest uptake onto wool. The higher sorption energy of the purified 1:1 ruberythric acid:lucidin primeveroside mixture (–11.4 kJ mol −1 ) compared with alizarin (–5.8 kJ mol −1 ) is in agreement with the HPLC results, indicating that the ruberythric acid/lucidin primeveroside mixture has a substantially higher affinity for wool compared with alizarin. Not only do the glycosides show higher affinity for the wool, but greater interactions between adsorbed species suggest a more extensive aggregation of dye on the surface of the wool. These observations are in contrast with much of the literature and bring into question previous conclusions that alizarin was the main dyeing species throughout history.