Saturday, 16 May 2026

Part C: Preparing Reagents for Dye Identification — The Quiet Foundation of the Test



Part C: Preparing Reagents for Dye Identification — The Quiet Foundation of the Test

General disclaimer: This article is intended for educational understanding of reagent preparation for textile dye-class identification. It is not a substitute for official standards, validated laboratory protocols, institutional safety manuals, chemical safety data sheets, or professional chemical-handling training. Many reagents mentioned here are corrosive, toxic, volatile, flammable, reducing, oxidizing, environmentally hazardous, or otherwise dangerous. Actual preparation and use should be performed only by trained personnel using suitable personal protective equipment, fume extraction, supervision, correct labelling, validated procedures, emergency arrangements, and proper waste-disposal systems.

In Part A, we understood the logic of preliminary dye identification. In Part B, we saw how suspected dye classes are confirmed through more specific reactions. But both parts depend on one quiet foundation: the reagents must be prepared correctly.

A dye may behave correctly, but if the reagent is weak, old, wrongly diluted, contaminated, or incorrectly labelled, the result may mislead the tester. In dye identification, the fabric speaks through the reagent. If the reagent is wrong, the fabric’s answer may also appear wrong.

This part explains how the common reagents used in dye identification are prepared, what percentage strength means, why distilled water and pure chemicals matter, and what is meant by old laboratory expressions such as Twaddell.

Reagent Preparation Map for Dye Identification Tests
Reagent preparation is the quiet foundation behind reliable dye identification.

Why Reagent Preparation Matters

Dye identification is not only about observing colour change. It is also about creating the correct chemical condition for that colour change to happen. A direct dye may not transfer properly if the salt level is wrong. A vat dye may not reduce properly if the reducing solution is weak. A sulphur dye may not show the expected behaviour if the alkaline reducing condition is not strong enough. A confirmatory reaction may fail simply because the reagent has deteriorated.

Therefore, reagent preparation is not a separate housekeeping activity. It is part of the test itself. The laboratory person must prepare solutions carefully, label them correctly, store them properly, and understand their strength.

Use Pure Chemicals and Distilled Water

The first principle is simple: use pure chemicals and distilled water wherever water is required. Pure chemicals do not mean expensive chemicals for their own sake. They mean chemicals that do not contain impurities that can affect the result of the test.

For example, if a reducing agent has partly oxidized during storage, it may not reduce the dye properly. If tap water contains interfering salts or minerals, it may change precipitation, staining, or colour development. If a bottle is wrongly labelled or contaminated, the entire test can become unreliable.

In practical terms, reagent preparation begins before weighing anything. It begins with clean glassware, correct labels, fresh chemicals, distilled water, and disciplined handling.

Understanding Percent Solutions

Many reagent strengths are written as percentages, such as 1 percent hydrochloric acid, 5 percent sodium hydroxide, or 10 percent acetic acid. In laboratory solution preparation, this is often understood as weight by volume, written as:

\[ \% \; (w/v) = \frac{\text{grams of solute}}{100 \text{ ml of final solution}} \]

So a 5 percent sodium hydroxide solution means:

\[ 5 \text{ g sodium hydroxide in } 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

Similarly, a 1 percent solution means:

\[ 1 \text{ g chemical in } 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

The important phrase is final solution. We do not simply add 5 g of chemical to 100 ml water. Instead, the chemical is dissolved in a smaller amount of water first, and then the total volume is made up to 100 ml.

General Method for Preparing a Solid Chemical Solution

For most solid chemicals, the preparation method is: take a clean beaker, add a smaller quantity of distilled water, weigh the required amount of chemical, dissolve the chemical completely, transfer the solution into a volumetric flask, rinse the beaker and add the washings into the flask, and finally make the volume up to the mark with distilled water.

For example, to prepare 100 ml of 5 percent sodium carbonate solution, dissolve:

\[ 5 \text{ g sodium carbonate} \]

in distilled water and make the final volume up to:

\[ 100 \text{ ml} \]

This gives:

\[ 5\% \; (w/v) \]

This same principle applies to many ordinary solid-chemical solutions such as sodium carbonate, ammonium chloride, lead acetate, ferric chloride, and sodium sulphide.

Preparing Sodium Hydroxide Solutions

Sodium hydroxide solutions are commonly required in strengths such as 5 percent, 10 percent, and 44 percent. The calculation is direct:

For 100 ml of 5 percent sodium hydroxide solution:

\[ 5 \text{ g NaOH} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

For 100 ml of 10 percent sodium hydroxide solution:

\[ 10 \text{ g NaOH} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

For 100 ml of 44 percent sodium hydroxide solution:

\[ 44 \text{ g NaOH} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

However, sodium hydroxide generates heat when it dissolves. The pellets should be added slowly to water, with stirring and cooling. The solution should be allowed to cool before the final volume is made up. This is important because hot solutions expand; if the final volume is adjusted while hot, the concentration may be inaccurate after cooling.

Preparing Acid Solutions

Acid solutions such as hydrochloric acid, acetic acid, and sulphuric acid are also used in dye identification. For dilute solutions, the same \(w/v\) idea may be applied when the strength is expressed as percentage.

For 100 ml of 1 percent hydrochloric acid solution:

\[ 1 \text{ g HCl} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

For 100 ml of 10 percent hydrochloric acid solution:

\[ 10 \text{ g HCl} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

For 100 ml of 5 percent sulphuric acid solution:

\[ 5 \text{ g H}_2\text{SO}_4 \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

In practice, concentrated acids are usually supplied as liquids of known strength and specific gravity. Therefore, exact dilution should be calculated from the concentration printed on the bottle. Strong acids must always be diluted carefully. The safe laboratory rule is: add acid slowly to water, never water into acid. This is especially important for sulphuric acid, which releases intense heat during dilution.

Percent Weight by Volume Reagent Preparation Guide
Most percentage solutions are prepared by dissolving the required mass and making up to final volume.

Acetic Acid and Glacial Acetic Acid

Acetic acid may be required as 10 percent, 20 percent, or as glacial acetic acid. Glacial acetic acid is the concentrated form. It has a strong smell and is corrosive, so it must be handled with care.

For 100 ml of 10 percent acetic acid solution:

\[ 10 \text{ g acetic acid} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

For 100 ml of 20 percent acetic acid solution:

\[ 20 \text{ g acetic acid} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

In dye identification, acetic acid is useful because it helps create acidic conditions for testing acid dyes and for certain colour reactions. The strength of the acetic acid solution matters because a weak or overly strong acid condition may alter the expected behaviour.

Ammonium Hydroxide Solution

Ammonium hydroxide may be used as a dilute solution or as concentrated ammonium hydroxide. A 1 percent ammonium hydroxide solution can be understood as:

\[ 1 \text{ g ammonium hydroxide in } 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

When prepared from concentrated ammonium hydroxide, the exact dilution depends on the strength of the stock solution. Ammonium hydroxide releases irritating ammonia fumes, so it should be handled in a fume hood or a well-ventilated laboratory area. The bottle should be tightly closed after use because ammonia can escape over time and weaken the solution.

Sodium Carbonate and Ammonium Chloride Solutions

Sodium carbonate is often used to create alkaline conditions. A 5 percent sodium carbonate solution is prepared as:

\[ 5 \text{ g sodium carbonate} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

Ammonium chloride may also be required as a 5 percent solution:

\[ 5 \text{ g ammonium chloride} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

These solutions are comparatively simple to prepare, but they still require proper labelling. The label should include the chemical name, strength, date of preparation, and preparer’s initials.

Vat Dye Developer Solution

Vat dyes are identified through reduction and reoxidation behaviour. Therefore, a developer solution may be required to help restore the original oxidized colour.

A typical vat dye developer solution is prepared by dissolving:

\[ 8 \text{ g ammonium chloride} + 2 \text{ g ammonium persulphate} \]

in water and making up to:

\[ 100 \text{ ml} \]

The logic of this reagent is connected to the chemistry of vat dyes. Vat dyes may become colourless or change colour under reducing conditions. When they are oxidized again, the original colour should return. The developer helps support that return.

Sodium Sulphoxylate Formaldehyde–Glycol Solution

This is an important reducing reagent used in testing vat dyes and azoic dye behaviour. It may be prepared by dissolving:

\[ 20 \text{ g sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde} \]

in:

\[ 75 \text{ ml warm water} \]

Then the solution is diluted with cold water and mixed with:

\[ 50 \text{ g monoethylene glycol or diethylene glycol} \]

Sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde is also known commercially as Formosul or Rongalite. Since this is a reducing reagent, its strength can deteriorate on storage. For important testing, freshness matters.

Sodium Sulphide Solution

Sodium sulphide is used in sulphur dye testing. It may be required as a 5 percent solution and sometimes as a solid.

For 100 ml of 5 percent sodium sulphide solution:

\[ 5 \text{ g sodium sulphide} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

Sodium sulphide must be handled with care. It can release hazardous fumes, especially if it comes into contact with acid. It should be used in a fume hood, and waste should be handled according to laboratory safety rules.

Sodium Hypochlorite Solution

Sodium hypochlorite is used in bleaching-type observations, especially in some confirmatory tests. Its strength is often expressed not simply as sodium hypochlorite percentage, but as available chlorine.

For example, a required sodium hypochlorite solution may be specified as:

\[ 2 \text{ to } 3 \text{ g/l available chlorine} \]

This means the important parameter is the amount of active chlorine available for reaction. Commercial bleach loses strength with time, light, heat, and contamination. So old bleach may not give reliable results.

Tannin Reagent

Tannin reagent is used in the confirmation of basic dyes. It may be prepared by dissolving:

\[ 10 \text{ g tannic acid} + 10 \text{ g anhydrous sodium acetate} \]

in:

\[ 200 \text{ ml water} \]

This reagent helps produce characteristic precipitate behaviour with basic dyes. Again, the reagent is not just a chemical liquid; it is part of the diagnostic question being asked.

Lead Acetate Solution

Lead acetate solution may be used for detecting sulphur-related behaviour. A 5 percent lead acetate solution is prepared as:

\[ 5 \text{ g lead acetate} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

Lead compounds are toxic. This reagent should be handled with strict care, and its waste should be collected separately. It should never be poured casually into a drain.

Stannous Chloride Solution

Stannous chloride solution is a strong acidic reducing reagent. It may be prepared by dissolving:

\[ 100 \text{ g stannous chloride} \]

in:

\[ 100 \text{ ml concentrated hydrochloric acid} \]

at boil. This is not a reagent that should be prepared casually. It involves concentrated acid and heating. It must be prepared only in a proper laboratory, with fume extraction, appropriate glassware, eye protection, gloves, and trained supervision.

Ferric Chloride Solution

Ferric chloride solution may be required as a 1 percent solution:

\[ 1 \text{ g ferric chloride} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml final solution} \]

Ferric chloride is used in the confirmation of basic dye behaviour, where a black precipitate may support the diagnosis. The solution should be stored properly because contamination or incorrect strength may affect the clarity of the reaction.

Carbazol and Chromotropic Acid Solutions

Carbazol solution may be prepared as 1 percent carbazol in concentrated sulphuric acid:

\[ 1 \text{ g carbazol} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml concentrated sulphuric acid} \]

This reagent is hazardous because the solvent itself is concentrated sulphuric acid.

Chromotropic acid solution may be prepared as 5 percent in distilled water:

\[ 5 \text{ g chromotropic acid} \rightarrow 100 \text{ ml distilled water} \]

Chromotropic acid is used in the confirmation of formaldehyde after-treatment. Such reactions are highly specific and depend on correct reagent strength and handling.

Dimethylformamide Solution

Dimethylformamide is used in solvent stripping tests. It may be required as a 50 percent solution and also in concentrated form. The 50 percent solution may be considered a diluted working solution, while concentrated dimethylformamide is used directly where stronger solvent action is needed.

Dimethylformamide is a hazardous organic solvent. It should be handled with suitable gloves and fume extraction. It should not be treated like an ordinary harmless laboratory liquid.

Twaddell Specific Gravity Scale for Textile Chemical Solutions
Twaddell is a density scale used to estimate the strength of heavy textile chemical solutions.

What Is Twaddell?

Some older textile and chemical references express solution strength using Twaddell, written as °Tw. Twaddell is not a percentage. It is a hydrometer scale used to express the specific gravity of liquids heavier than water.

Water has:

\[ \text{Specific gravity} = 1.000 \]

On the Twaddell scale, water is:

\[ 0^\circ Tw \]

For liquids heavier than water:

\[ ^\circ Tw = (\text{Specific Gravity} - 1) \times 200 \]

The reverse formula is:

\[ \text{Specific Gravity} = 1 + \frac{^\circ Tw}{200} \]

So if a caustic soda solution is described as 70° Twaddell, then:

\[ \text{Specific Gravity} = 1 + \frac{70}{200} \]

\[ = 1.35 \]

Thus:

\[ 70^\circ Tw = \text{specific gravity } 1.35 \]

This explains why a strong sodium hydroxide solution may be described as approximately 44 percent sodium hydroxide or 70° Twaddell. The percentage tells the approximate concentration, while Twaddell tells the density reading from a hydrometer.

Twaddell Is a Density Scale, Not a Direct Percentage

This distinction is very important. Twaddell does not directly say how much chemical is present. It tells how heavy the solution is compared with water. From that density, the concentration may be estimated using tables.

Twaddell Reading Specific Gravity
0° Tw 1.000
10° Tw 1.050
20° Tw 1.100
40° Tw 1.200
70° Tw 1.350
100° Tw 1.500

In old textile dyeing and processing departments, hydrometers were commonly used because they gave a quick way to check the strength of solutions. Instead of doing a full chemical analysis, the operator could dip the hydrometer into the liquid and read the approximate strength through density.

Why Twaddell Appears in Textile Testing

Textile processing uses many heavy chemical solutions: caustic soda, acids, salt solutions, reducing liquors, and finishing chemicals. Their strength affects dyeing, stripping, mercerizing, scouring, and chemical identification tests.

A caustic soda solution that is too weak may fail to reduce or strip properly. A solution that is too strong may damage the fibre or produce misleading behaviour. Twaddell helped textile workers quickly check whether the solution was within the expected range.

Simple way to remember: Twaddell tells us how heavy the solution is; from that, we infer whether the solution strength is roughly correct.

Labelling Reagents Correctly

Every prepared reagent should be labelled clearly. A good laboratory label should include the following information: chemical name, concentration, date of preparation, hazard warning, preparer’s initials, and storage requirement. For example:

Sodium Hydroxide Solution, 5 percent \(w/v\)
Prepared on: 16 May 2026
Prepared by: ___
Hazard: Corrosive
Storage: Tightly closed bottle

This simple discipline prevents many laboratory errors. A bottle labelled only “NaOH” is not enough because sodium hydroxide may be required in different strengths such as 5 percent, 10 percent, or 44 percent.

Storage and Freshness of Reagents

Not all reagents remain reliable forever. Ammonium hydroxide can lose ammonia. Hydrogen peroxide can decompose. Sodium hypochlorite can lose available chlorine. Reducing agents such as sodium hydrosulphite or sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde can deteriorate. Organic solvents may absorb moisture or become contaminated.

Therefore, reagent bottles should not merely be stored; they should be monitored. Freshly prepared solutions are often more reliable for sensitive tests. Old reagents may produce weak, delayed, or false reactions.

Summary Table: Reagent Preparation and Use

Reagent Typical Preparation / Strength Main Use in Dye Identification
Ammonium hydroxide 1% solution; concentrated stock also used Mild alkali bleeding and stripping checks
Sodium hydroxide 5%, 10%, 44% Alkaline extraction, reduction conditions, confirmatory reactions
Sodium carbonate 5% solution; also solid Alkaline medium in sulphur dye testing
Ammonium chloride 5% solution Basic dye confirmation and vat developer
Vat dye developer 8 g ammonium chloride + 2 g ammonium persulphate in 100 ml water Restores vat dye colour after reduction
Sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde–glycol 20 g reducing agent + 75 ml warm water + 50 g glycol Reduction test for vat and azoic dyes
Sodium sulphide 5% solution; also solid Sulphur dye reduction testing
Sodium hypochlorite 2–3 g/l available chlorine Bleaching and oxidation black observations
Tannin reagent 10 g tannic acid + 10 g sodium acetate in 200 ml water Basic dye confirmation
Lead acetate 5% solution Sulphur-related confirmation
Stannous chloride 100 g in 100 ml concentrated HCl at boil Sulphur dye confirmation
Ferric chloride 1% solution Basic dye confirmation
Carbazol 1% in concentrated sulphuric acid Formaldehyde-related reaction
Chromotropic acid 5% in distilled water Formaldehyde after-treatment confirmation
Dimethylformamide 50% and concentrated Solvent stripping
Twaddell Density scale: \( ^\circ Tw = (SG - 1)\times 200 \) Checking strength of heavy solutions

Final Thought

Reagent preparation is the silent discipline behind dye identification. Part A and Part B show how the fabric behaves, but Part C reminds us that the fabric can reveal the truth only when the chemical question is correctly asked.

A wrong reagent asks the wrong question. A weak reagent gives a weak answer. A contaminated reagent creates confusion. A correctly prepared reagent allows the dye to reveal its class.

In practical textile testing, the final lesson is simple: prepare the reagent carefully, understand its strength, label it clearly, and respect its hazards. That is where reliable dye identification begins.

Safety note: Reagent preparation may involve corrosive acids, strong alkalis, toxic salts, organic solvents, oxidizing agents, reducing agents, fumes, and heat-generating dilutions. These should be handled only by trained persons in a properly equipped laboratory.

Acknowledgement: This article is based on the reagent-preparation guidance and density references used in IS 4472 Part 1:2021.

Part B: Confirming the Dye Class on Cotton — The Second Diagnostic Journey



Part B: Confirming the Dye Class on Cotton — The Second Diagnostic Journey

General disclaimer: This article is intended for educational understanding of confirmatory textile dye-class identification. It is not a substitute for official standards, institutional laboratory procedures, safety manuals, or professional chemical-handling training. Any actual testing should be performed only by qualified personnel using appropriate personal protective equipment, ventilation, supervision, validated methods, documentation, and waste-disposal practices.

In Part A, the dye was questioned through broad behaviour. We asked whether the colour stripped, bled, transferred to cotton, transferred to wool, responded to reduction, returned after oxidation, or behaved like a colour formed inside the fibre. That first journey gave us a probable dye class. Part B now takes the next step: it asks whether that suspicion can be confirmed by a more specific reaction.

This second journey is not a repetition of Part A. It is more like cross-examination. If Part A says, “This may be a direct dye,” Part B asks, “Can it behave like a direct dye under stronger confirmation?” If Part A says, “This may be sulphur dye,” Part B asks, “Can we detect the sulphur behaviour more specifically?” If Part A says, “This may be vat dye, azoic dye, pigment, oxidation black, or ingrain dye,” Part B gives separate confirmation routes for each possibility.

Annex B Confirmatory Dye Identification Flow
Part B begins where Part A ends: suspicion is converted into confirmation.

Why Confirmation Is Needed

Preliminary tests are useful, but they are not always final. Some dyes overlap in behaviour. A dye may resist stripping because it is chemically bonded, but another dye may resist stripping because of after-treatment. A black shade may look like sulphur black, vat black, or oxidation black. A pigment may not behave like a normal dye because it is held by a binder rather than absorbed into the fibre.

So the confirmatory stage asks a sharper question: does the suspected dye class give its own characteristic reaction? This is the logic of Part B. We move from general behaviour to class-specific proof.

Practical idea: Part A gives a probable direction. Part B checks whether that direction can stand up to a more specific chemical test.

1. Confirming Direct Dyes

If the preliminary test suggests a direct dye, the confirmation begins by checking whether the colour can be extracted and then re-applied to cotton in a controlled way. One route is to boil the specimen briefly in 5 percent sodium hydroxide solution, add a little mercerized cotton, and allow the extracted dye to dye the mercerized cotton for about 10 minutes. If the dye fixed on the mercerized cotton is not removed by 1 percent ammonium hydroxide solution, the behaviour supports the presence of a direct dye.

A second route uses cold ethylenediamine. The specimen is shaken with a small amount of ethylenediamine, and the coloured extract is diluted with water. White cotton is then introduced, heated to around 80°C, and a little sodium chloride is added. If the white cotton is evenly stained and the stain is not removed by boiling with 1 percent ammonium hydroxide solution, this again supports direct dye behaviour. This route is especially useful for certain pale blue dyeings that may not respond strongly to the sodium hydroxide extraction route.

The logic is simple. Direct dyes should be extractable under suitable conditions and should show affinity for cotton. The confirmation is not just that the colour comes out, but that it can again attach to cotton and remain there against a mild stripping challenge.

2. Confirming Formaldehyde After-Treated Direct Dyes

Sometimes the suspicion is not merely “direct dye,” but direct dye after-treated with formaldehyde. This is a more specific situation because the dye has been modified after application to improve performance. The confirmation uses 12 N sulphuric acid extraction for about 5 minutes. Then 1 to 2 ml of concentrated sulphuric acid and 4 to 5 drops of chromotropic acid are added. A reddish violet colour supports the presence of formaldehyde after-treatment.

The logic here is important for commercial textiles. An after-treated direct dye may not behave like an ordinary direct dye in the preliminary test. The confirmatory test therefore looks not only at the dye, but also at the chemical history of the fabric. In other words, it asks: was the direct dye modified after dyeing?

3. Confirming Basic Dyes

If the preliminary behaviour points toward a basic dye, the confirmation begins by extracting the colour with alkali and then changing the medium. The specimen is treated with 1 ml of 5 percent sodium hydroxide solution and boiled briefly. Then 4 ml of 5 percent ammonium chloride solution is added, and the mixture is boiled again. This extract becomes the basis for further confirmation.

The first confirmation is fibre affinity. A small amount of the extract is taken, a few pieces of undyed wool are added, and the solution is allowed to cool. If most of the dye is taken up by the wool, it supports basic dye behaviour. The second confirmation uses tannin reagent after acidifying the extract with 10 percent acetic acid. A coloured precipitate supports the presence of basic dye. The third confirmation uses 1 percent ferric chloride solution after acidification; a black precipitate is another supporting reaction.

The sequence makes sense. Basic dyes are cationic in nature and can form characteristic interactions with mordants and reagents. So the confirmation does not rely on one sign only. It looks at extraction, wool uptake, tannin precipitation, and ferric chloride reaction.

Confirmatory Tests for Direct Basic and Formaldehyde After-Treated Dyes
Direct, basic, and after-treated direct dyes are confirmed by extraction, fibre affinity, and reagent reactions.

4. Confirming Sulphur Dyes

If the preliminary test suggests sulphur dye, Part B confirms it by looking for sulphur-related behaviour more directly. A specimen is boiled with stannous chloride solution in a test tube. The mouth of the test tube is covered with filter paper moistened with lead acetate solution. Brown staining on the filter paper indicates sulphur dye behaviour, with deep brown stains being especially significant.

There are also supporting checks. The specimen may be boiled with ethylenediamine, in which case sulphur dye is readily stripped. Another test treats the specimen with sodium hypochlorite solution; sulphur dyeings may bleach to white or buff colour. However, some special black dyeings may not behave in the same way, so these observations must be interpreted with care.

The logic is that sulphur dyes are not confirmed merely by their dark shade or by their reduction behaviour. The confirmatory route looks for evidence associated with sulphur chemistry and its response to specific stripping and bleaching conditions.

5. Confirming Vat Dyes

If the preliminary test indicates vat dye, confirmation again depends on reduction and reoxidation. A specimen is boiled with 5 to 10 ml of sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde-glycol solution containing a little 44 percent sodium hydroxide solution. A distinct colour change is observed. The specimen is then removed and washed with fresh water. If the original colour returns, or returns after treatment with vat dye developer or hydrogen peroxide, vat dye behaviour is supported.

A second confirmation uses ethylenediamine and glucose near the boiling point. Under this treatment, the colour is more or less completely removed. This provides another way of testing the characteristic reducible nature of vat dyes.

The logic is straightforward. Vat dyes live between two chemical states: a reduced soluble form and an oxidized insoluble coloured form. The confirmation asks whether the dye can enter that reversible cycle and return to the original shade.

Vat dye confirmation can be understood as:

\[ \text{Oxidized coloured vat dye} \xrightarrow{\text{Reduction}} \text{Reduced soluble form} \xrightarrow{\text{Oxidation}} \text{Original coloured form} \]

6. Confirming Azoic Dyes

If preliminary testing suggests azoic dye, the confirmation begins with extraction. The specimen is boiled with a sufficient amount of ethylenediamine for a few minutes, and a considerable amount of dye is extracted. The extract is then divided into two parts. To one part, a little sodium hydrosulphite is added and warming is done if needed. Permanent decolourization supports azoic dye behaviour.

The other part of the extract is diluted with water and boiled. If the liquid becomes turbid and coloured pigment flakes settle on standing, that is another supporting sign. Additional confirmation may use sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde-glycol solution with 44 percent sodium hydroxide, where many azoic dyeings reduce to colourless or yellow compounds. If reduction does not appear after one or two minutes, boiling in 5 percent sodium hydroxide solution with a little sodium hydrosulphite may reduce azoic dyeings to pale yellow or white.

Another practical confirmation uses liquid phenol. The specimen is dipped in phenol, lightly squeezed, placed between filter papers, and pressed with a hot iron or on a steam pipe. Staining of the filter paper supports azoic dye behaviour. This is a very physical-looking test, but the principle is still the same: coax the developed colour system out of the fibre and observe its characteristic response.

7. Confirming Pigments

Pigments behave differently from dyes because they are not usually absorbed into the fibre in the same way. They are often held on the fibre surface by a binder. So the confirmatory route first attacks the binder system. For vat pigments, the specimen is treated with methyl pyrrolidone, which plasticizes the resin binder. After that, the usual vat dye confirmation route is followed.

For azoic pigments, a specimen of about 200 mg is treated with 1 ml methyl pyrrolidone for about 30 seconds and cooled. Then 5 percent sodium hydroxide solution and 25 to 50 mg sodium hydrosulphite are added. The mixture is boiled until the sample becomes white, light yellow, or orange. The solution is filtered, and 25 mg sodium chloride plus a few pieces of cotton are added. After boiling for about 1 minute and cooling, the white cotton is removed and dried. Yellowing or browning of the cotton helps distinguish pigment type.

The logic is very important. A pigment does not reveal itself like a normal dye because it may be trapped in a binder film. So the binder has to be disturbed first. Only then can the colour system be tested.

Confirmatory Tests for Sulphur Vat Azoic Pigment and Oxidation Black Dyes
Reduction, oxidation, binder disturbance, and special reactions help confirm difficult dye classes.

8. Confirming Oxidation Black

If the preliminary route points towards oxidation black, the confirmation checks for reactions typical of aniline black type colouration. One test digests the specimen with concentrated sulphuric acid in the cold. On dilution with water, a green colour is obtained. Another test treats the specimen with sodium hypochlorite solution for about 1 minute; the specimen turns brown. A further route ashes about 5 g of specimen and tests the ash for iron or copper; a positive result supports this class.

The logic is that oxidation black is not just a black dye sitting on cotton. It is a colour developed through oxidation chemistry. Therefore, the confirmation is not about simple dye transfer; it is about the special reactions associated with that black colour system.

9. Confirming Ingrain Dyes Other Than Azoics

If the preliminary route suggests an ingrain dye other than azoic, Part B gives specific confirmation routes for particular dye types such as Phthalogen Green, Phthalogen Blue, and Alcian Blue. These tests use methyl pyrrolidone, heating, cooling to around 70°C, 10 percent sodium hydroxide, and 20 to 40 mg sodium hydrosulphite. The interpretation depends on the shade change and whether the colour reduces or remains stable.

For Phthalogen Green, the colour reduces to dark violet, and when the specimen is placed in 20 percent acetic acid, the violet colour remains. For Phthalogen Blue, the colour does not reduce under the same reduction treatment, while spotting with concentrated nitric acid changes it to violet and spotting with concentrated sulphuric acid changes it to bright green. For Alcian Blue, the colour changes to violet under reduction, then changes to green in 20 percent acetic acid; acid spotting reactions also give characteristic colour changes.

The logic here is that not all ingrain colours behave alike. Once the broad class is suspected, the confirmation becomes shade-system specific. We are no longer asking only, “Is it an ingrain dye?” We are asking, “Which ingrain dye behaviour does it match?”

The Whole Confirmatory Sequence in One Flow

The second diagnostic journey begins only after the first journey has created a suspicion. If direct dye is suspected, the confirmation checks whether extracted colour can dye mercerized or white cotton and remain resistant to mild ammonium hydroxide stripping. If formaldehyde after-treatment is suspected, a colour reaction with chromotropic acid confirms the after-treatment angle.

If basic dye is suspected, the extract is challenged through wool uptake, tannin precipitation, and ferric chloride reaction. If sulphur dye is suspected, the test looks for sulphur-related staining on lead acetate paper, stripping with ethylenediamine, and bleaching behaviour with hypochlorite. If vat dye is suspected, the confirmation checks whether reduction changes the colour and oxidation restores it.

If azoic dye is suspected, the confirmation uses extraction, permanent decolourization, turbidity, pigment flake formation, reduction to colourless or yellow compounds, and transfer/staining behaviour. If pigment is suspected, the binder is first plasticized before the colour system is tested. If oxidation black is suspected, the confirmation checks acid digestion, hypochlorite browning, and metallic evidence in ash. If ingrain dye is suspected, specific shade reactions are used to distinguish different ingrain systems.

Simple Practical Table

Suspected Dye Class Confirmatory Logic Positive Direction
Direct dye Extract and re-dye cotton; check resistance to mild ammonium hydroxide stripping Cotton stains evenly and stain remains
Formaldehyde after-treated direct dye Acid extraction followed by chromotropic acid reaction Reddish violet colour
Basic dye Extract, then test wool uptake, tannin reaction, and ferric chloride reaction Wool uptake / coloured precipitate / black precipitate
Sulphur dye Boil with stannous chloride and detect stain on lead acetate paper Brown stain on paper
Vat dye Reduce colour, wash, then restore by oxidation/developer Original colour returns
Azoic dye Extract, reduce, dilute, and observe pigment behaviour Permanent decolourization or pigment flakes
Pigment Plasticize binder first, then test dye system Binder disturbance reveals vat or azoic pigment behaviour
Oxidation black Acid digestion, hypochlorite reaction, and ash test Green dilution / brown hypochlorite response / metal evidence
Ingrain dye Specific reduction and acid spotting reactions Characteristic violet, green, or non-reduction behaviour

Why Part B Matters

Part A is like asking the fabric, “What do you generally do?” Part B is like asking, “Can you prove it?” This is why both parts belong together. The first part narrows the field; the second part strengthens the identification.

For a merchandiser, this distinction is useful because it explains why two similar-looking fabrics may behave differently in washing, rubbing, stripping, bleaching, or reprocessing. For a lab technician, it provides a structured confirmation route. For a textile student, it shows that dye identification is not memorization of shade names, but interpretation of chemical behaviour.

The deeper lesson is this: a dye class is not defined only by colour. It is defined by how the colour is attached, how it can be removed, how it can be transferred, how it reacts with acids and alkalis, and whether it can be reduced, oxidized, restored, precipitated, or developed.

Final Thought

Part A gives the suspicion. Part B gives the confirmation. Together, they form a complete diagnostic journey. The tester begins with broad behaviour and then moves to sharper proof. A direct dye must show cotton affinity. A basic dye must show its characteristic extract reactions. A sulphur dye must reveal sulphur behaviour. A vat dye must show reversible reduction and oxidation. An azoic dye must reveal its developed pigment character. A pigment must first be freed from its binder logic. An oxidation black must show the chemistry of oxidation black. An ingrain dye must reveal its own special colour reactions.

In the simplest words: first observe the behaviour, then confirm the identity. That is the discipline of dye-class identification.

Safety note: The tests discussed in this article may involve hazardous chemicals such as strong acids, strong alkalis, reducing agents, oxidizing agents, organic solvents, phenol, methyl pyrrolidone, ethylenediamine, stannous chloride, lead acetate, sodium hypochlorite, and other laboratory reagents. These should be handled only by trained persons in a properly equipped laboratory.


Acknowledgement: This article is based on the confirmatory identification logic given in Annex B of IS 4472 Part 1:2021.

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Part A: Practical Test Procedures for Preliminary Identification of Dyes on Cotton



Part A: Practical Test Procedures for Preliminary Identification of Dyes on Cotton

General disclaimer: This article is intended for educational understanding of preliminary textile dye-class identification. It is not a substitute for official standards, laboratory protocols, institutional safety procedures, or professional chemical-handling training. The tests discussed may involve toxic, corrosive, flammable, volatile, reducing, oxidizing, and environmentally hazardous substances. Any actual testing should be performed only by trained personnel in a properly equipped laboratory with suitable personal protective equipment, ventilation, supervision, documentation, and waste-disposal systems.

In the previous part, we understood the logic of dye identification: do not judge the dye only by its colour; judge it by its behaviour. A red colour, a blue colour, or a black colour may be produced by different dye classes. The real question is: what happens when the dyed cotton is treated with solvents, acids, alkalis, reducing agents, oxidizing agents, or auxiliary fibres such as white cotton and wool?

This part explains the tests more practically. The purpose is to show how each test is performed, what quantities are used where specified, what temperature condition is used, and what observation should be made. This should be treated as an educational explanation, not as a substitute for a trained laboratory procedure. Several reagents mentioned here are hazardous and should be handled only in a proper laboratory.

Cotton Dye Identification Practical Test Flowchart

Practical sequence of preliminary dye-class identification tests on cotton.

1. Preparation of the Test Specimen

Before any dye identification test is started, the specimen has to be selected correctly. If the material is fibre or yarn, take a tuft of about 3 cm length. If the material is fabric, take a test piece of about 3 cm × 3 cm. For multicoloured woven fabrics, each coloured yarn should be tested separately. For printed fabrics, the specimen should be taken from the printed portion, not from the plain ground. Finished textiles may need pretreatment twice with 1 percent hydrochloric acid at boil for 5 minutes.

This specimen preparation stage is not a minor formality. If the wrong portion is tested, the result may be misleading. For example, in a printed cotton fabric, the ground may be reactive dyed while the print may be pigment printed or azoic printed. Testing the wrong area may identify the wrong colour system.

2. Solvent Stripping Test for Strongly Fixed or Ingrain Dyes

The first practical question is: can the colour be stripped out by strong solvent treatment? The specimen is treated successively with three solvent systems. First, it is treated with 50 percent dimethylformamide. Then it is treated with concentrated dimethylformamide. Finally, it is treated with a 1:1 mixture of glacial acetic acid and rectified spirit. Each treatment is done at boil for 3 to 4 minutes, with intermediate washing in water and squeezing between treatments.

The observation is simple but important. If there is no stripping, or only partial stripping, the dye may belong to the group of reactive dyes or ingrain dyes, except azoic dyes. The logic is that reactive dyes are chemically fixed to cellulose, and ingrain colours are formed within the fibre system. Therefore, they resist ordinary stripping. However, this is only a preliminary indication, because some basic dyes may also resist stripping.

3. Mild Alkali Bleeding Test

If the first test does not establish strongly fixed or ingrain behaviour, a fresh test specimen is taken and boiled in 1 percent ammonium hydroxide solution for 1 to 2 minutes.

This test asks whether the dye bleeds into a mild alkaline medium. If the solution becomes distinctly coloured, the dye has been extracted from the fibre to some extent. But extraction alone is not enough for identification. The next step is to see whether the extracted dye can re-dye another fibre.

4. Direct Dye Re-Dyeing Test on White Cotton

If the specimen bleeds and the solution becomes distinctly coloured, remove the original test specimen. Then add a few pieces of white bleached cotton and 25 mg of sodium chloride. Boil this for 2 minutes. After boiling, cool and rinse the added bleached cotton.

If the added white cotton is dyed to approximately the original shade, the indication is direct dye. The reason is that direct dyes have affinity for cotton, especially in the presence of salt. The dye leaves the original specimen, enters the solution, and then dyes fresh cotton. In practical language, the dye repeats its own dyeing behaviour in miniature.

5. Acid Dye Transfer Test on Wool

Sometimes the specimen bleeds into the alkaline solution, but the added white cotton remains undyed or only slightly stained. In that case, neutralize the solution with acetic acid. Then add 1 ml of 10 percent acetic acid, introduce pieces of undyed wool, and boil for 1 minute. After boiling, cool and rinse the wool pieces.

If the wool becomes dyed, the indication is acid dye, provided direct and basic dyes are absent. The logic is based on fibre affinity. Acid dyes generally prefer protein fibres such as wool and silk. So if the extracted dye does not properly dye cotton but dyes wool in acidic conditions, the behaviour points towards an acid dye.

Dye Transfer Test Using White Cotton and Wool
Transfer tests help distinguish direct dye behaviour from acid dye behaviour.

6. Basic Dye Test Using Mordanted Cotton

If the test specimen does not bleed, or bleeds only slightly, a fresh specimen is treated differently. Add 1 ml of glacial acetic acid and warm the specimen. Then add 3 to 5 ml of water and boil. Remove the original specimen, add 25 mg of mordanted cotton, and boil for 2 minutes.

If the mordanted cotton becomes dyed, the indication is basic dye. Basic dyes do not necessarily show strong affinity for untreated cotton, but mordanted cotton can attract them. The mordant acts like a bridge between the dye and the fibre. This test is therefore not simply about whether the dye comes out; it is about whether the dye is captured by a specially prepared receiving material.

7. Test for Direct Dyes After Resin Treatment

Sometimes a direct dye may have been after-treated with resin or fixing agent. Because of this, it may not bleed or transfer like an ordinary direct dye. To uncover this possibility, the specimen is treated with 1 percent hydrochloric acid and then tested for direct dye behaviour. If the specimen responds to the direct dye test after acid treatment, the indication is direct dye after-treated with resin.

This is a very practical commercial point. A buyer or merchandiser may see a cotton fabric that behaves better in washing because the dye has been fixed after dyeing. The dye class may still be direct dye, but the after-treatment masks its ordinary behaviour.

8. Acid Pre-Treatment Before Moving to Reduction Tests

If direct, reactive, ingrain, acid, and basic dyes are absent, take a fresh specimen and add 10 to 15 ml of 1 percent hydrochloric acid. Boil for 1 minute, discard the acid solution, and repeat once or twice.

This step prepares the specimen for the next stage of testing. By this point, simple extraction and fibre-transfer behaviour have not given the answer. The identification now moves toward dyes that reveal themselves through reduction and oxidation.

9. Sulphur Dye Reduction and Reoxidation Test

For sulphur dye behaviour, take a fresh specimen and add 2 to 3 ml of water, 1 to 2 ml of 5 percent sodium carbonate solution, and 500 mg of solid sodium sulphide. Boil the mixture for 2 minutes. Remove the specimen. Then add 25 mg of sodium chloride and a few pieces of white bleached cotton. Boil again for 2 minutes. Place the original specimen and the white cotton on filter paper and allow reoxidation.

If the white cotton is dyed and, after reoxidation, the white cotton is redyed to approximately the original shade while the test specimen also restores its colour, the indication is sulphur dye. This test is based on the reduction–oxidation nature of sulphur dyes. Under reducing alkaline conditions, the dye becomes mobile. On exposure to air or reoxidation, the colour returns.

Diagnostic idea: Sulphur dye behaviour can be understood as:

\[ \text{Insoluble coloured dye} \xrightarrow{\text{Reduction}} \text{Soluble leuco form} \xrightarrow{\text{Oxidation}} \text{Insoluble coloured dye} \]

10. Oxidation Black or Aniline Black Test

If cotton is not redyed from the sodium carbonate–sodium sulphide solution, a fresh sample is taken in an evaporating dish. Add 2 to 3 ml of concentrated sulphuric acid and shake just enough to extract the dye. Pour the extract into a test tube, add 25 ml of water, and filter. Wash the filter paper with water. Then spot the filter paper with 10 percent sodium hydroxide solution.

If the spot turns red-violet, the indication is oxidation black, also called aniline black. This is especially relevant for black shades. Not every black is sulphur black or vat black. Some blacks are produced by oxidation chemistry on the fibre, and this test is designed to detect that behaviour.

11. Vat Dye Reduction and Developer Test

If sulphur dye and oxidation black are absent, take a fresh specimen and boil it with sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde-glycol solution containing a few drops of 44 percent sodium hydroxide solution. The specimen may become decolourized or show a marked shade change. The solution may become yellow, bluish red, or show another characteristic colour. Then test whether the original colour is restored by treatment with a vat-dye developer.

If the original colour is restored, the indication is vat dye. Vat dyes are identified through their reversible reduction–oxidation behaviour. In dyeing, a vat dye is reduced to a soluble form, enters the fibre, and then is oxidized back to its insoluble coloured form. This test reproduces that principle in a diagnostic way.

    Reduction Oxidation Tests for Sulphur and Vat Dyes

Reduction and oxidation tests reveal sulphur and vat dye behaviour.

12. General Reduction Test for Group III and Group IV Behaviour

There is also a broader reduction observation in the sequence. If dyes of the earlier group are absent, a fresh test specimen is boiled for 1 to 2 minutes in 5 to 10 ml of water containing 10 to 30 mg of sodium hydrosulphite, to which 4 to 6 drops of 44 percent sodium hydroxide solution are added.

The observation separates two broad behaviours. Group III dyes may decolourize or change shade radically, and the colour may be restored on exposure to air or with vat-dye developer. Group IV dyes are destroyed and do not restore to the original colour on reoxidation. This is a key distinction: reversible colour change suggests one type of dye chemistry, while irreversible destruction suggests another.

13. Chromium Salt After-Treatment Test

For direct dyes after-treated with chromium salts, take a fresh test specimen of about 6 g and ash it in a porcelain crucible. Add 200 mg of flux, made from equal parts of sodium carbonate and sodium nitrate, and fuse.

If the fused mass is orange-yellow when hot and permanent greenish-yellow when cold, the indication is direct dye after-treated with chromium salts. Here the test is no longer looking only at the dye. It is looking for evidence of metallic after-treatment.

14. Copper Salt After-Treatment Test

If chromium is absent, ash the specimen as above. Dissolve the ash in a few drops of concentrated nitric acid. Add 2 ml of water, boil, and cool. Then add 2 ml of concentrated ammonium hydroxide.

If a blue colour appears, the indication is direct dye after-treated with copper salts. This is another example where the fabric’s after-treatment history becomes part of dye identification. The original dye may be direct dye, but metal salt treatment changes its performance and laboratory behaviour.

15. Formaldehyde After-Treatment Test

If chromium- or copper-treated direct dyes are absent, take a fresh specimen and treat it with 5 percent boiling sulphuric acid. Cool the solution and add 1 percent carbazol solution dropwise.

If a blue precipitate appears, it indicates the presence of formaldehyde, and the dye is interpreted as direct dye after-treated with formaldehyde. Again, the test is not simply detecting the shade. It is detecting a chemical after-treatment associated with the dyeing process.

16. Pyridine Test for Azoic and Developed Dyes

For azoic and related developed dyes, take a fresh specimen, add 2 ml of pyridine, and boil. Repeat the treatment using 2 to 3 fresh portions of pyridine.

If the specimen bleeds and continues to bleed in subsequent treatments, the indication is azoic dye. If the specimen does not bleed, or bleeds only slightly, and the bleeding decreases or usually stops, the indication is diazotized and developed dye. This test is useful because azoic colours are often formed within the fibre through coupling reactions. Their behaviour is therefore different from ordinary absorbed dyes.

Practical Flow of the Tests

The test sequence starts with the least specific but very revealing question: can the dye be stripped? If not, reactive or ingrain behaviour is suspected. If the dye can be extracted in mild alkali, the next question is whether it can re-dye white cotton. If it can, direct dye is suspected. If it cannot dye cotton but can dye wool in acid medium, acid dye is suspected. If mordanted cotton takes up the colour, basic dye is suspected.

If these routes do not identify the dye, the testing moves into reduction and oxidation behaviour. Sulphur dyes are checked through sodium sulphide reduction and reoxidation. Oxidation black is checked through strong acid extraction and alkaline spotting. Vat dyes are checked through reduction with sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde-glycol solution and restoration with vat-dye developer. After-treated direct dyes are checked through chromium, copper, and formaldehyde-related reactions. Finally, azoic and developed dyes are examined through repeated pyridine treatment.

Summary Table of Practical Test Conditions

Purpose of Test Main Reagents and Quantities Heating / Time Positive Indication
Solvent stripping 50% dimethylformamide, concentrated dimethylformamide, glacial acetic acid:rectified spirit 1:1 Boil, 3–4 min each No/partial stripping: reactive or ingrain dye
Mild alkali bleeding 1% ammonium hydroxide Boil, 1–2 min Dye bleeds into solution
Direct dye check White cotton + 25 mg sodium chloride Boil, 2 min White cotton dyed to near original shade
Acid dye check Neutralize, add 1 ml 10% acetic acid + undyed wool Boil, 1 min Wool dyed
Basic dye check 1 ml glacial acetic acid, 3–5 ml water, 25 mg mordanted cotton Warm, then boil 2 min Mordanted cotton dyed
HCl pre-treatment 10–15 ml 1% hydrochloric acid Boil, 1 min; repeat Prepares specimen for further tests
Sulphur dye test 2–3 ml water, 1–2 ml 5% sodium carbonate, 500 mg solid sodium sulphide, then 25 mg sodium chloride + white cotton Boil 2 min + boil 2 min White cotton redyed; colour restored on reoxidation
Oxidation black test 2–3 ml concentrated sulphuric acid, 25 ml water, 10% sodium hydroxide spotting Extraction, filtration, spotting Red-violet spot
Vat dye test Sodium sulphoxylate formaldehyde-glycol solution + few drops 44% sodium hydroxide Boil Colour restored by vat-dye developer
General reduction check 5–10 ml water, 10–30 mg sodium hydrosulphite, 4–6 drops 44% sodium hydroxide Boil, 1–2 min Reversible or irreversible colour change
Chromium after-treatment About 6 g specimen, 200 mg flux Ash and fuse Orange-yellow hot, greenish-yellow cold
Copper after-treatment Ash + conc. nitric acid, 2 ml water, 2 ml conc. ammonium hydroxide Boil and cool Blue colour
Formaldehyde after-treatment 5% boiling sulphuric acid, 1% carbazol solution Boil, cool, add dropwise Blue precipitate
Azoic dye test 2 ml pyridine; repeat with 2–3 fresh portions Boil Continued bleeding indicates azoic dye

Important Laboratory Safety Note

These procedures involve hazardous reagents such as concentrated sulphuric acid, concentrated nitric acid, sodium sulphide, sodium hydrosulphite, pyridine, dimethylformamide, sodium hydroxide, and ammonium hydroxide. Some are corrosive, toxic, volatile, or strongly reducing/oxidizing. These tests should be carried out only in a properly equipped textile or chemical laboratory with fume extraction, gloves, goggles, lab coat, trained supervision, and proper waste disposal.

For educational understanding, the most important lesson is not to memorize every chemical first. The main lesson is to understand the diagnostic logic: strip, bleed, transfer, reduce, oxidize, restore, destroy, or detect after-treatment. That is the practical grammar of dye-class identification.

Acknowledgement: This practical blog is based on the preliminary identification sequence given in Annex A of IS 4472 Part 1:2021.

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Part A: How to Identify the Class of Dye on Cotton — The First Diagnostic Journey



Part A: How to Identify the Class of Dye on Cotton — The First Diagnostic Journey

General disclaimer: This article is intended for educational understanding of textile dye-class identification. The tests discussed may involve hazardous chemicals, heating, solvents, acids, alkalis, reducing agents, oxidizing conditions, and toxic vapours. These procedures should be performed only by trained personnel in a properly equipped laboratory with suitable personal protective equipment, ventilation, supervision, and waste-disposal practices. The article should not be used as a substitute for official standards, laboratory protocols, or professional safety guidance.

When we see a coloured cotton fabric, the first question is usually simple: What colour is it? But in textile testing, that question is not enough. A red cotton fabric may be dyed with a reactive dye, direct dye, azoic dye, vat dye, or even a pigment system. A black cotton fabric may be sulphur black, vat black, aniline black, or another dye class altogether. So the more useful question is: how does this colour behave when we challenge it?

Does it come out in solvent, bleed in alkali, re-dye white cotton, prefer wool, respond to reduction and oxidation, or behave like a colour formed inside the fibre? This is the heart of dye-class identification. We are not identifying the commercial dye name. We are identifying the application class of the dye.

Dye Identification Diagnostic Flow for Cotton
Dye identification begins by observing behaviour, not merely shade.

The Basic Idea: Do Not Guess the Dye, Observe Its Behaviour

A dye class is not identified by looking at the shade alone. Many dye classes can produce similar-looking colours. The real clue lies in how the colour is held by the fibre. Some dyes are chemically bonded with cotton, some are held by physical affinity, some are developed inside the fibre, some can be reduced and reoxidized, some can be stripped and transferred to another piece of cloth, and some refuse to move at all.

Therefore, the testing sequence begins with broad observations and then becomes progressively more specific. The logic is similar to diagnosis: first ask general questions, then narrow down the possibilities. The fabric is not judged by appearance alone; it is questioned through a series of chemical behaviours.

Practical idea: The question is not only “What is the colour?” The better question is “What does the colour do when challenged?”

Step 1: Can the Colour Be Stripped Out?

The first test asks whether the dye can be removed from cotton by strong solvent treatment. The specimen is treated successively with strong solvent systems to see whether the colour can be stripped from the fibre. If the colour does not come out, or comes out only partly, it suggests that the dye is not merely sitting loosely on the fibre. It may be chemically fixed, or it may have been formed inside the fibre.

This points towards dyes such as reactive dyes and ingrain dyes, except azoic dyes. The logic is easy to understand. Reactive dyes form a chemical bond with cellulose. Once properly fixed, they do not easily leave the fibre. Similarly, ingrain colours are produced within the fibre structure, so they may also resist solvent stripping.

The first conclusion, therefore, is that if the dye refuses to strip, one should suspect a dye that is strongly fixed or internally formed. But this is still only a preliminary clue. Some other dyes may also behave stubbornly, so the sequence does not end here unless the evidence is strong. We move forward.

Step 2: If It Is Not Strongly Fixed, Does It Bleed in Mild Alkali?

If the first test does not clearly indicate reactive or ingrain behaviour, a fresh specimen is boiled in a mild alkaline solution. Now the question becomes whether the dye bleeds out into the solution. If the colour comes out, we have learned that the dye is extractable under alkaline conditions.

But bleeding alone is not enough for identification. The next question becomes more important: where does this extracted dye prefer to go? This is where the sequence becomes very intelligent, because it does not merely observe removal of colour; it observes the dye’s affinity for another fibre.

Step 3: If It Bleeds, Will It Re-Dye White Cotton?

After the dye bleeds into the solution, white bleached cotton is added along with salt. If this fresh white cotton becomes dyed approximately to the original shade, the behaviour suggests a direct dye. Direct dyes have natural affinity for cotton, and salt helps them move from the solution onto the cotton fibre.

This is one of the most elegant parts of the sequence. The dye leaves the original fabric and then goes onto another cotton sample. In doing so, it repeats its own application behaviour. We are not depending on colour appearance; we are watching the dye demonstrate how it behaves with cotton.

Step 4: If It Bleeds but Does Not Dye Cotton, Will It Dye Wool?

Sometimes the dye bleeds into the solution, but the added white cotton does not get dyed properly. At this point, we do not immediately reject the dye. Instead, we change the receiving fibre. The solution is made acidic, and wool is introduced.

If wool becomes dyed, the behaviour suggests an acid dye. Acid dyes usually have greater affinity for protein fibres such as wool and silk. Cotton is a cellulosic fibre and does not normally attract acid dyes in the same way. So if the dye does not properly go onto cotton but does go onto wool in acidic conditions, the behaviour points towards acid dye.

The sequence is logical. First we ask whether the dye comes out. Then we ask whether it goes back to cotton. If it does not, we ask whether it goes to wool. One observation leads naturally to the next.

Dye Transfer Test from Cotton to White Cotton and Wool
Transfer behaviour helps distinguish direct dyes from acid dyes.

Step 5: If It Does Not Bleed Much, Will Mordanted Cotton Pick It Up?

Now consider another possibility. The original specimen does not bleed much in the mild alkaline solution, or the bleeding is very slight. At this stage, the test moves towards another dye class. The specimen is treated with acetic acid and heat, and then mordanted cotton is introduced.

If mordanted cotton becomes dyed, the behaviour suggests a basic dye. Basic dyes do not behave like ordinary direct dyes on untreated cotton. However, mordanted cotton can attract them because the mordant acts like a bridge between the dye and the fibre.

This step is important because it shows that dye identification is not only about extracting the colour. It is also about understanding the relationship between dye, fibre, and auxiliary treatment. Ordinary cotton may not reveal the basic dye clearly, but mordanted cotton may catch it.

Step 6: What If a Direct Dye Has Been After-Treated?

Sometimes a direct dye may not behave like a normal direct dye because it has been treated after dyeing to improve fastness. Such treatment may reduce its tendency to bleed or transfer. This creates a practical problem: a direct dye may be present, but its normal behaviour may be hidden.

So the sequence introduces an acid pre-treatment. After this treatment, the sample is tested again for direct dye behaviour. If direct dye behaviour appears after this treatment, the indication is an after-treated direct dye.

This is especially relevant in commercial textiles. Many direct dyes are after-treated with fixing agents or resins to improve wash fastness. Because of that, the dye may not behave like an untreated direct dye in the first test. The acid treatment helps reveal what the after-treatment was hiding.

Step 7: If These Dyes Are Absent, Move to Reduction Behaviour

If reactive, ingrain, direct, acid, and basic dye behaviours are not established, the test sequence moves to another family of dyes. Now the question changes completely. Instead of asking whether the dye bleeds or transfers, we ask whether the dye responds to reduction and oxidation.

This shift is important because some dye classes are applied through a reduction–oxidation mechanism. They may not simply dissolve and transfer like direct dyes. Their identity is revealed when their chemical state is changed. In other words, these dyes must be challenged chemically before they reveal themselves.

Step 8: Does the Dye Reduce, Transfer, and Reoxidize?

A fresh specimen is treated under reducing alkaline conditions. Then white cotton and salt are added. If the colour transfers to the white cotton and returns after oxidation, the behaviour suggests a sulphur dye. Sulphur dyes are applied in a reduced soluble form and then oxidized back into an insoluble coloured form inside the fibre.

Their diagnostic sequence is therefore: reduce the dye, make it mobile, allow it to transfer, oxidize it again, and see whether the colour returns. This is very different from direct dye behaviour. A direct dye is identified by affinity and transfer, while a sulphur dye is identified by chemical transformation.

Step 9: If It Does Not Behave Like Sulphur Dye, Is It Oxidation Black?

Black shades require special care because not every black behaves like sulphur black or vat black. Some blacks are produced by oxidation reactions on the fibre. If the previous reduction-transfer route does not confirm sulphur dye behaviour, a special reaction is used to check for oxidation black, also known as aniline black.

The practical meaning is that some black colours are not ordinary applied dyes. They are produced by oxidation chemistry on the fibre, and therefore they need a separate diagnostic path. This is a useful reminder that a shade name such as “black” tells us very little; the method of producing that black matters greatly.

Step 10: Does the Colour Change Under Reduction and Return on Oxidation?

If sulphur dye and oxidation black are not indicated, the next possibility is a dye class that also depends on reduction and oxidation: vat dye. Vat dyes are insoluble dyes that are temporarily converted into a soluble reduced form during dyeing. After entering the fibre, they are oxidized back into their insoluble coloured form.

The diagnostic clue is that the colour changes or is discharged under reducing conditions but returns when oxidized. This reversible behaviour is the key. Vat dyes do not behave like direct dyes because they are not simply dissolved and absorbed in the ordinary way. They depend on a change of chemical state.

Reduction and Oxidation Behaviour of Sulphur and Vat Dyes
Reduction and oxidation behaviour helps reveal sulphur and vat dye classes.

Step 11: What If the Direct Dye Was Modified with Metal Salts or Formaldehyde?

Some direct dyes are after-treated not merely with resin but with metallic salts or formaldehyde-type treatments. These treatments improve fastness and alter the dye’s behaviour. So the test sequence also checks for direct dyes after-treated with chromium salts, copper salts, or formaldehyde.

This part of the sequence is not asking only what dye is present. It is also asking whether the dye has been chemically after-treated. That question matters because after-treatment can hide or modify normal dye behaviour. In commercial terms, this is very practical: a fabric may have started with a direct dye, but after-treatment may make it behave differently during extraction, washing, or testing.

Step 12: If Earlier Groups Do Not Respond Clearly, Consider Azoic Dyes and Pigments

Finally, if the specimen does not respond clearly to the earlier tests, or responds only slowly and incompletely, the sequence moves towards dyes and pigments that are more difficult to classify through ordinary extraction behaviour. This includes azoic dyes and pigments.

Azoic dyes are often formed inside the fibre by a coupling reaction. Because the colour is developed within the fibre, it may not behave like a dye that was simply absorbed from a dyebath. One of the tests uses repeated treatment with pyridine. The logic is based on whether the colour continues to bleed or whether bleeding gradually decreases and stops.

If bleeding continues through repeated treatment, azoic dye behaviour may be indicated. If bleeding is slight and decreases or stops, diazotized and developed dye behaviour may be indicated. The important idea is that azoic colour is not merely applied; it is developed. Therefore, its identification requires a different kind of questioning.

The Whole Sequence in One Flow

The diagnostic journey begins by asking whether the dye can be stripped. If it cannot be stripped, reactive or ingrain behaviour is suspected. If it can bleed, the next question is whether it re-dyes cotton. If it re-dyes cotton, direct dye behaviour is suspected. If it does not dye cotton but dyes wool, acid dye behaviour is suspected. If mordanted cotton takes it up, basic dye behaviour is suspected.

If direct dye behaviour appears only after acid treatment, after-treated direct dye behaviour is suspected. If these possibilities are absent, the enquiry moves to reduction and oxidation. If the dye reduces, transfers, and reoxidizes, sulphur dye behaviour is suspected. If a black shade gives special oxidation-black behaviour, aniline black is considered. If the colour disappears and returns through reduction and oxidation, vat dye behaviour is suspected.

If after-treatment chemicals such as chromium, copper, or formaldehyde are detected, modified direct dyes are considered. If earlier tests fail or respond incompletely, azoic dyes and pigments are examined. This is not a random list of chemical tests. It is a carefully arranged diagnostic sequence in which each result answers one question and creates the next question.

Simple Practical Table

Question Asked During Testing What the Behaviour Suggests
Does the dye resist solvent stripping? Reactive or ingrain dye
Does the dye bleed and re-dye white cotton? Direct dye
Does the dye bleed but dye wool instead of cotton? Acid dye
Does mordanted cotton pick up the colour? Basic dye
Does direct dye behaviour appear after acid treatment? After-treated direct dye
Does the dye reduce, transfer, and reoxidize? Sulphur dye
Does black show special oxidation-black reaction? Aniline black
Does colour return after reduction and oxidation? Vat dye
Are chromium, copper, or formaldehyde after-treatments indicated? After-treated direct dye
Does repeated pyridine treatment show azoic behaviour? Azoic or developed dye

Why This Matters to Textile Professionals

For a laboratory person, this sequence is a testing route. For a merchandiser, it is a way of understanding why fastness differs. For a textile student, it is a lesson in dye-fibre chemistry. For a quality professional, it is a reminder that shade appearance alone is never enough.

Two fabrics may look similar but behave very differently in washing, rubbing, light exposure, stripping, or processing. The difference often lies in the dye class and the method of application. A reactive-dyed cotton behaves differently from a direct-dyed cotton. A sulphur-dyed black behaves differently from an oxidation black. A vat dye behaves differently from an azoic dye. An after-treated direct dye behaves differently from an untreated direct dye.

Final Thought

The first part of dye identification is not about naming the dye. It is about listening to the behaviour of the colour. Some colours come out, some refuse to move, some move to cotton, some move to wool, some need mordanted cotton, some disappear and return, some are formed inside the fibre, and some are changed by after-treatment.

The tester’s job is to follow these clues step by step. In the simplest words: do not ask only, “What is the colour?” Ask, “What does the colour do when challenged?”

Acknowledgement: This article is based on the preliminary identification logic given in Annex A of IS 4472 Part 1:2021.

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