PH indicator
pH indicators are compounds that change color depending on the pH of the solution they are in. This property of theirs is widely used in labs to measure pH.
Contents
Common indicators
Litmus
Litmus is a complex mixture of plant dyes, discovered back in the days of alchemists. It is red in low pH, purple in neutral pH, and blue in high pH. Modern litmus paper strips are no longer based on natural dyes, they are impregnated with litmoid, or 7-hydroxyphenoxazone, which is produced artificially.
Universal indicator
The most common modern indicator strips are impregnated with a mixture of dyes which allows very precise measuring of pH. Generally, universal indicator strips are red in low pH, yellow or green in neutral pH and blue in high pH, but there is a hue corresponding to every integer meaning of pH.
Anthocyanin
An easily obtained replacement for litmus, anthocyanin can be extracted from various food products, but the best one comes from hibiscus herbal tea (marketed under names such as "Flor de Jamaica", "Karkade", "Italian Tea" or "Red Zinger"), extracted with ethanol. It is red in low pH, purple in neutral pH, bluish-green in high pH and yellow in very high pH. It can also be made from red cabbage, but such an extract is inferior, because cabbage contains a lot of water, which goes into the extract and makes it less stable.
Phenolphthalein
An indicator for bases, the colorless phenolphthalein turns rose, pink or crimson in high pH. Several decades ago, it was in common use as an over-the-counter laxative, which guaranteed easy access to this indicator for amateur chemists. Currently, it is no longer sold in drugstores.
Curcumin
An over-the-counter replacement for phenolphthalein, the yellow curcumin turns red in high pH. It can be extracted from inexpensive spices such as turmeric.
Methyl orange
An indicator for acids, methyl orange changes its color to red in very low pH.
This article is a stub. Please help Sciencemadness Wiki by expanding it, adding pictures, and improving existing text.
|