|
Definition of Acid dye
1. Noun. Dye in which the chromophore is part of a negative ion.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Acid Dye
Literary usage of Acid dye
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Monographic Medicine by William Robie Patten Emerson, Guido Guerrini, William Brown, Wendell Christopher Phillips, John Whitridge Williams, John Appleton Swett, Hans Günther, Mario Mariotti, Hugh Grant Rowell (1916)
"Sometimes we use two different kinds of acid dye in the same combined stain,
since it has been found that the different acidophilic substances in the formed ..."
2. Chemistry of Dye-stuffs by Georg von Georgievics (1903)
"... acid dye-STUFFS. As long ago as 1834 Runge observed the production of a
dye-stuff from phenol, and also found that the same was able to form very ..."
3. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1908)
"A definite compound is thus obtained, which may be regarded as a compound of the
basic dye with the organic residue of the acid dye. ..."
4. A Manual of clinical diagnosis by means of microscopic and chemical methods by Charles Edmund Simon (1907)
"If it is desired to prepare a tricolor mixture two possibilities suggest themselves,
viz., a mixture containing one acid dye and two basic dyes, ..."
5. Physiological histology, methods and theory by Gustav Mann (1902)
"That water containing sulphuric acid (an acid bath) extracts less acid dye than
does pure water is again readily explainable on chemical grounds, ..."