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Author: Subject: Help me identify this compound
Chem Science
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shocked.gif posted on 21-8-2021 at 08:11
Help me identify this compound


I have this compound and dont know what it is. It a green powder that dissolves in water to give blue solution.
In acidic pH turns yellowIn (Reversible)
In basic pH turns colorless (Irreversible)
Here are some pictures. If you want i can do extra test and report back

Powder I.JPG - 833kB Powder (Bright light).JPG - 630kB pH Colours.JPG - 2.1MB

[Edited on 21-8-2021 by Chem Science]
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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 10:19


What happens if you heat it?
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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 11:06


Any context on where you got it? Like, did it come from a lab, or did you find it in the trash?



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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 11:07


Bromophenol blue if yellow at pH 3 and blue at pH 4.6.

Bromocresol green is yellow at pH 4 and blue at pH 5.6.

Bromothymol blue is yellow at pH 6 and blue at pH 7.6.

Structures of all three are similar.

Source
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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 11:09


Bromocresol green is a beige solid though, not green like pictured. I just used some yesterday.

Edit: I just found jars of the other two indicators at work, and bromophenol blue is a yellow/beige solid and bromthymol blue is a light pink solid. Not that this unequivocally proves that what you have is not one of those three compounds, since the color of the solid may depend on hydration, impurities, and whether or not it's in the salt form.

[Edited on 8-21-2021 by Texium]




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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 11:31


What I think is interesting is that the loss of color is irreversible. I have no idea what it could be however.
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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 12:36


Quote: Originally posted by Tsjerk  
What I think is interesting is that the loss of color is irreversible. I have no idea what it could be however.

One thing it means is that the stuff probably isn't a normal pH indicator.
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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 12:40


The first picture looks like thymol blue on its wikipedia page. But thymol blue is red below pH 1.2, just as bromothymol blue turns magenta below pH 0.

So I think a couple tests that would help would be to see if the yellow color changes again to magenta or red on further acidification, and to find the particular pH where the yellow changes to blue.

I didn't see anything on wikipedia about an indicator that is irreversibly decolorized when basic.
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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 15:30


What base are you using?



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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 16:01


Quote: Originally posted by Triflic Acid  
What base are you using?


He has bottles of hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide out, so those are probably what he used.




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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 16:23


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malachite_green

This seems like a possibility. See if you can get the colour back from the alkaline solution by the use of an oxidising agent




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[*] posted on 21-8-2021 at 17:26


Ok so answering the questions.
Texium: Yes it's from a lab, so it's a pure substance (I hope)
Tsjerk: Yea the loss of color is irreversible and also strike me.
unionised: Yeah i thought it was some sort of pH indicator but after seeing the base reaction made me think it may not be
Jenks: No the color at pH<1 is yellow :(
NitrateKittens: Here are the results ..

Basic Solution and compound (Beginning).JPG - 1.8MBSolution After Persulfate and Nitric Acid.JPG - 1.6MBSolution after Persulfate.JPG - 2MB
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[*] posted on 22-8-2021 at 04:56


Well that rules out formation of a leuco dye at high pH. Perhaps the color loss is due to hydrolysis.

Maybe the dye is an ester? If you have access to hydroxylamine and ferric chloride you could do the following test: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SymjxfSmN0E




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[*] posted on 22-8-2021 at 04:59


Is the compound soluble in acetone just out of interest? If so does it display these same color changes under anhydrous conditions (HCl bubbling/use of an amine)




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[*] posted on 22-8-2021 at 04:59


You have no idea?

Do a flame test. Try to rule out inorganic.

Organic? Do a melting point depression test, to approximate molecular wt..
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[*] posted on 22-8-2021 at 05:33


Quote: Originally posted by NitratedKittens  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malachite_green

This seems like a possibility. See if you can get the colour back from the alkaline solution by the use of an oxidising agent
I could have told you it isn’t malachite green to begin with. It’s truly green in solution, not blue like the picture here.



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[*] posted on 22-8-2021 at 12:56


Here are some results:

Solubility
_Acetone: Soluble with purple colour
_Benzene: Insoluble
_Perchloroethylene: Insoluble

Beilstein Test NEGATIVE

Colurs in Acetone
Acetone Alone: Purple Colour
Acetone + Diethylamine = Colorless or slightly yellow
Acetone + Diethylamine + HCl = Blue colour to green

Hydrloxylamine Test

Unfortunately it seems like my hydroxylamine is no good because i ran the experiment with Iso-Amyl Acetate and it didn't work.

Powder and Acetone.JPG - 738kB Powder and Perchloroethylene.JPG - 730kB Powder in Benzene.JPG - 547kB Powder in Acetone and Diethylamine (2).JPG - 711kB Powder In Acetone and Diethylamine and HCl.JPG - 665kB Problem before heating.JPG - 483kB Problem After Heating.JPG - 793kB Hydroxylamine Hydrochloride Test (Before).JPG - 1.3MB Hydroxylamine hydrochloride Test (After).JPG - 1.2MB

[Edited on 22-8-2021 by Chem Science]
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[*] posted on 23-8-2021 at 14:03


I think it is Methylene Green. However i can't find much info about these compound.
If you have any info in these compound please share
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[*] posted on 24-8-2021 at 05:09


Quote: Originally posted by Chem Science  
I think it is Methylene Green. However i can't find much info about these compound.
If you have any info in these compound please share

All I found was that methylene green powder is supposed to be black.
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[*] posted on 24-8-2021 at 05:52


Well, if you want to take the boring but reliable route to identifying it, you could send me 10 milligrams in an envelope and I could run an NMR.



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[*] posted on 24-8-2021 at 06:31


Quote: Originally posted by Jenks  
Quote: Originally posted by Chem Science  
I think it is Methylene Green. However i can't find much info about these compound.
If you have any info in these compound please share

All I found was that methylene green powder is supposed to be black.


Ohh :( ... Well my powder is green.
But i did found that it does dissolve to give a blue solution, and these made me suspect it might be it.

Quote: Originally posted by Texium  
Well, if you want to take the boring but reliable route to identifying it, you could send me 10 milligrams in an envelope and I could run an NMR.


That's very nice, but im from Argentina, and i highly think it will be very difficult for me to send you a sample :'(
I'll see if i can pay an NMR and come back with it :)
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[*] posted on 24-8-2021 at 09:55


I would be willing to cover shipping if you can take paypal or cash app.
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[*] posted on 24-8-2021 at 21:36


Hi. I also have green compound and I don't know what it's. It has very dark green colour and it is indicator. First photo: acidic, neutral, basic. Basic solution is opaque. Also compound isn't very soluble in water.

received_511574626772192.jpeg - 242kB

received_1269136243522420.jpeg - 187kB




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[*] posted on 25-8-2021 at 07:21


Quote: Originally posted by Chem Science  

That's very nice, but im from Argentina, and i highly think it will be very difficult for me to send you a sample :'(
I'll see if i can pay an NMR and come back with it :)
Shipping shouldn’t be too bad if you can put it in a small envelope and send it by regular mail. Prices jump for actual packages. From a quick Google search, I see postage of an envelope from Argentina to the US should be about $3-5 USD. Definitely would cost less than paying someone to get an NMR for you, unless you know someone locally who can do it for free or cheap.



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[*] posted on 25-8-2021 at 11:07


Quote: Originally posted by vano  
Hi. I also have green compound and I don't know what it's. It has very dark green colour and it is indicator. First photo: acidic, neutral, basic. Basic solution is opaque. Also compound isn't very soluble in water.

Can you use a second, known pH indicator (pH paper or pH meter) to determine at what pH the color of your unknown is changing? It would also help if you could dilute the basified indicator to show what color it has become.
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