Bioresource Technology 2005-02-01

Isolation of colour components from native dye-bearing plants in northeastern India.

Ranjana Bhuyan, C N Saikia

Index: Bioresour. Technol. 96(3) , 363-72, (2005)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Recently dyes derived from natural sources have emerged as important alternatives to synthetic dyes. A study was initiated in the year 2000 at the RRL (CSIR), Jorhat to extract dyes from parts of five different plant species indigenous to northeastern India. The colour components responsible for dyeing were isolated and their chemical constituents were established based on chemical and spectroscopic investigations. The principal colour components from the species Morinda angustifolia Roxb., Rubia cordifolia Linn. and Tectona grandis Linn. were found to contain mainly anthraquinone moieties in their molecules. Those from the species Mimusops elengi Linn. and Terminalia arjuna (Roxb.) Wight & Arn. contained flavonoid moieties in their molecules. The absorption of dye (%) on fibres increased with increasing concentrations of dye in the dye-bath. Maximum absorption of dyes on fibres was obtained at 3% concentration of dyes obtained from R. cordfolia (35.350%), M. angustifolia (31.580%) and T. grandis (25.888%) and at 4% concentration of the dyes from M. elengi (31.917%) and T. arjuna (12.246%). The K/S values were found to increase with the increase in concentration of mordants. The colour co-ordinates of dyed samples were found to lie in the yellow-red quadrant of the colour space diagram. The dyes obtained from the native plants may be alternative sources to synthetic dyes for the dyeing of natural silk and cotton.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Structural and optical properties of Purpurin for dye-sensitized solar cells.

2015-10-05

[Spectrochim. Acta. A. Mol. Biomol. Spectrosc. 149 , 997-1008, (2015)]

Protection against the bacterial mutagenicity of heterocyclic amines by purpurin, a natural anthraquinone pigment.

1999-08-18

[Mutat. Res. 444(2) , 451-61, (1999)]

Toxicity and tumorigenicity of purpurin, a natural hydroxanthraquinone in rats: induction of bladder neoplasms.

1996-04-19

[Cancer Lett. 102(1-2) , 193-8, (1996)]

Modified porphyrins, chlorins, phthalocyanines, and purpurins: second-generation photosensitizers for photodynamic therapy.

1989-04-01

[Semin. Hematol. 26(2) , 157-73, (1989)]

Biochemical differentiation of nascent neurite junctions: unilateral localization of adheron components.

1990-02-01

[Brain Res. Dev. Brain Res. 51(2) , 205-16, (1990)]

More Articles...