US634824A - Dyeing wool fast black. - Google Patents

Dyeing wool fast black. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US634824A
US634824A US71429999A US1899714299A US634824A US 634824 A US634824 A US 634824A US 71429999 A US71429999 A US 71429999A US 1899714299 A US1899714299 A US 1899714299A US 634824 A US634824 A US 634824A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
black
fast black
dyeing wool
dyeing
goods
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US71429999A
Inventor
Paul Julius
Richard Laiblin
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
BASF SE
Original Assignee
BASF SE
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by BASF SE filed Critical BASF SE
Priority to US71429999A priority Critical patent/US634824A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US634824A publication Critical patent/US634824A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06PDYEING OR PRINTING TEXTILES; DYEING LEATHER, FURS OR SOLID MACROMOLECULAR SUBSTANCES IN ANY FORM
    • D06P1/00General processes of dyeing or printing textiles, or general processes of dyeing leather, furs, or solid macromolecular substances in any form, classified according to the dyes, pigments, or auxiliary substances employed
    • D06P1/32General processes of dyeing or printing textiles, or general processes of dyeing leather, furs, or solid macromolecular substances in any form, classified according to the dyes, pigments, or auxiliary substances employed using oxidation dyes
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08LCOMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
    • C08L89/00Compositions of proteins; Compositions of derivatives thereof
    • C08L89/005Casein
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S8/00Bleaching and dyeing; fluid treatment and chemical modification of textiles and fibers
    • Y10S8/916Natural fiber dyeing
    • Y10S8/917Wool or silk

Definitions

  • Our invention relates to the production of beautiful black shades on woolen goods which possess a valuable degree of fastness by the aid of the disazo dyes which are obtained from ortho-amido-pheuol-para-sulfoacid.
  • Some of these secondary disazo dyes have long been known andhave been patented under the EnglishLetters Patent No. 10,845, of 1888; but when dyed in the usual way they yield shades which are not beautiful and vary from violet to foxy black. They have not been adopted in the dyeing industry, and the rights under the said Letters Patent have been allowed to lapse. We have discovered that these dyes can be used for the production of valuable fast deep-black colorations on wool.
  • the valuable shades are obtained by dyeing wool in the ordinary way with the coloring-matters and treating the dyed fabric with a chromate or a chrome salt.
  • the fabric assumes a deepblaek color and has a beautifully blueish, greenish, or blue-violet cast upon looking over the goods, and the shades are of extraordin ary fastness. Further, the intensity of the color is considerably increased.
  • the shades produced are fast to alkali and acid. The fastness to washing and fulliug is good,. andiu point of fastness to light the shades so obtained are very excellent. 1
  • the disazo coloring-matters thatare used are those obtained from ortho-amido-phenol para-sulfo-acid with alpha-naphthylamin as middle component and a naphthol or dioxy naphthalen e-or sulfo-acids thereof as end com ponents.
  • the sodium bisulfate (or its substitute) is preferably added in four (4.) portions at intervals of about a quarter of an hour.
  • the bath is exhausted, add to it about six hundred (600) grams of potassium b'ichromate and boil the goods in the solution so obtained for half an hour. Swill the goods and work up in the usual way.
  • the treatment with bichromate can be effected in a separate bath, if desired.
  • the manner of dyeing remains the same if instead of the coloring-matter stated in the example the other disazo dyes herein defined be taken.
  • the chromium compound used may be added to the dye-bath at. the start or when the dyeing has been partly effected. Further, the dye-baths after the removal of the goods contain some ofthe chromium com-' pound. This can be utilized by adding a fresh proportion of dye and dyeing another batch of goods from the same liquid, adding during the operations the further requisite quantity of chromium compound, and so on.
  • Alpha-naphthol-4-sulfoacid Deep black. R-salt "l Blue-black. Alpha-naphthol-4-sulfoacid 5 Do.

Description

UNITED. STATES PATENT FFICE.
PAUL JULIUS AND RICHARD LAIBLIN, LUDWIGrSHABEN, GERMANY, AS- SIGNORS TO THE BADISOHE ANILIN AND SODA FABRIK, OF SAME PLACE.
DYVEING wool. FAST BLACK.
SPECIFICATION forming' part of Letters Patent No. 634,824, dated October 10, 1899.
Application filed April 24, 1899. Serial No. 714,299. (No specimens.)
To all whom it may concern:
vBe it known that we, PAUL JULIUS, a subject of the EmperorofAustria-Huugary, and RICHARD LAIBLIN, a subject of the King of \Viirtemburg, both doctors of philosophy, residing at Ludwigshafen-on-the-Rhiue, in the Kingdom of Bavaria and Empire of Germany, have invented new and useful Improvements in the Production of Fast-Black Shades on Wool, (for which applications for patent were filed in Germany, No. 23,640, dated October 31, 1898; in England, No. 6,244, dated March 22, 1899, and in France, No. 275,117, dated March 25, 1899,) of which the following is a specification. I
Our invention relates to the production of beautiful black shades on woolen goods which possess a valuable degree of fastness by the aid of the disazo dyes which are obtained from ortho-amido-pheuol-para-sulfoacid. Some of these secondary disazo dyes have long been known andhave been patented under the EnglishLetters Patent No. 10,845, of 1888; but when dyed in the usual way they yield shades which are not beautiful and vary from violet to foxy black. They have not been adopted in the dyeing industry, and the rights under the said Letters Patent have been allowed to lapse. We have discovered that these dyes can be used for the production of valuable fast deep-black colorations on wool. The valuable shades are obtained by dyeing wool in the ordinary way with the coloring-matters and treating the dyed fabric with a chromate or a chrome salt. The fabric assumes a deepblaek color and has a beautifully blueish, greenish, or blue-violet cast upon looking over the goods, and the shades are of extraordin ary fastness. Further, the intensity of the color is considerably increased. The shades produced are fast to alkali and acid. The fastness to washing and fulliug is good,. andiu point of fastness to light the shades so obtained are very excellent. 1
The disazo coloring-matters thatare used are those obtained from ortho-amido-phenol para-sulfo-acid with alpha-naphthylamin as middle component and a naphthol or dioxy naphthalen e-or sulfo-acids thereof as end com ponents.
The following example will serve to illustrate the manner in which our invention can best be carried into practical effect: Take, say, thirty (30) kilograms of merino cloth and dye this in a bath composed ofnine hundred (900) liters of water, one and a half (1%) kilo grains of calcined Glauber salt, and one (1) kilogram of the coloring-matter from ortho amido-phenol-para-sulfo-acid, alpha-naphthylamin, and betauaphthol-Ssulfo-acid. Dye first by boiling the goods for a quarter of an hourin this bath while neutral. Then add two (2) kilos of sodium bisulfate, which can, if desired, be replaced partly or wholly by acetic or other acids. The sodium bisulfate (or its substitute) is preferably added in four (4.) portions at intervals of about a quarter of an hour. When the bath is exhausted, add to it about six hundred (600) grams of potassium b'ichromate and boil the goods in the solution so obtained for half an hour. Swill the goods and work up in the usual way. The treatment with bichromate can be effected in a separate bath, if desired. The manner of dyeing remains the same if instead of the coloring-matter stated in the example the other disazo dyes herein defined be taken.
The above example describes a good way of Working in practice according to which it' is possible to readily obtain a certain definite shade; but the manner of proceeding may be varied without departure from our invention. Thus the chromium compound used may be added to the dye-bath at. the start or when the dyeing has been partly effected. Further, the dye-baths after the removal of the goods contain some ofthe chromium com-' pound. This can be utilized by adding a fresh proportion of dye and dyeing another batch of goods from the same liquid, adding during the operations the further requisite quantity of chromium compound, and so on.
The following table indicates the shade obtained with the coloring-matters containing the components mentioned as end components:
End component. Shade obtained.
Alpha-naphthol-4-sulfoacid Deep black. R-salt "l Blue-black. Alpha-naphthol-4-sulfoacid 5 Do.
1 .1-dioxynaphthalene-4-sulfoacid Gleenish black.
Now what We claim is The process for the production of fast-black shades on wool by dyeing the woolen goods from an acid-bath with the hereindeseribed secondary disazo dyes from ortho-amido-phenol-para-snlfo-acid and treating the dyeings with a chrome salt, all substantially as hereinbefore described.
In testimony whereof We have hereunto set our hands in the presence of two subscribing witnesses.
PAUL JULIUS. RICHARD LAIBLIN.
WVit-nesses:
ERNEST F. EHRHARDT, J. L. HEINKE.
US71429999A 1899-04-24 1899-04-24 Dyeing wool fast black. Expired - Lifetime US634824A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US71429999A US634824A (en) 1899-04-24 1899-04-24 Dyeing wool fast black.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US71429999A US634824A (en) 1899-04-24 1899-04-24 Dyeing wool fast black.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US634824A true US634824A (en) 1899-10-10

Family

ID=2703415

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US71429999A Expired - Lifetime US634824A (en) 1899-04-24 1899-04-24 Dyeing wool fast black.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US634824A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2353675A (en) Monoazo dyestuffs and their manufacture
US2597676A (en) Complex chromium compounds of o.o'-dihydroxy azo dyestuffs
US2151518A (en) Azo dyestuff
GB197809A (en) Improvements in the preparation of azo compounds
US634824A (en) Dyeing wool fast black.
US3012843A (en) Process for the coloration of linear polyester fibres with new azo dyestuffs
US2683707A (en) Complex chromium compounds of
US1843376A (en) Process for preparing chromium compounds of azo-dyestuffs
US677228A (en) Disazo dye.
US2512845A (en) Monoazo-dyestuffs
US1855963A (en) Uniform dyeing of viscose
US1854077A (en) of basel
US2199043A (en) Acid azo dyestuffs and their manufacture
US1887603A (en) Process for the production of metal compounds of azo-dyestuffs on animal fibers
US2539737A (en) Mixtures of thioindigoid dyestuffs
US2059903A (en) Water insoluble azo dyestuffs and their production
US2692262A (en) Sulfurized leuco-indophenol dyestuffs and process for their production
US2590639A (en) Azo dyestuff
US2157725A (en) Azo dyestuffs
US2094414A (en) Azo dyestuffs
US1950952A (en) Manufacture of primary disazodyestuffs and their production
US521095A (en) Heinrich august bernthsen
US2538741A (en) Monoazo-dyestuffs and process of making same
US1791432A (en) Azo dyestuffs and process of making same
US2267565A (en) Dyestuffs