Please note that the colours on this document are for
demonstration purposes only as colours vary with individual
monitors and therefore cannot be guaranteed as accurate.
Solvent dye is a dye which
is soluble in an organic solvent and is mostly introduced
in the form of a solution in an organic solvent.
Dyes are generally defined
along the lines of being coloured, aromatic compounds that
can ionise. One class of dyes is an exception to this. These
colour by dissolving in the target material, which is invariably
a lipid or non-polar solvent. The Colour Index uses this
as a classification and naming system. Each dye is named
according to the pattern: solvent + base colour + number
These dyes are thereby
specifically identified as dyes of the stated colour, and
whose primary mechanism of staining is by dissolving. Note
that this is a functional and colour classification. It
contains no chemical information, neither does it imply
that dyes with similar names but unique numbers are in any
way related. It should also be noted that the classification
refers to the primary mechanism of staining. Other mechanisms
may also be possible, but are rare.
As a general principle,
solvent dyes do not ionise. Many are azo dyes which have
undergone some molecular rearrangement and lost the ability
to ionise. In the process they gained the ability to dissolve
in non-polar materials such as triglycerides. They are commonly
used to stain such materials in sections. They are frequently
called lysochrome dyes. Lyso- meaning dissolve, and -chrome
meaning colour.
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