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QUERCITRON , a yellow dyestuff obtained from the bark of the quercitron See also: oak, Quercus tinctoria, a See also: fine See also: forest See also: tree indigenous in See also: North See also: America
.
The name is a shortened See also: form of " quercicitron," from See also: Lat. quercus, oak, and " citron," and was invented by Dr See also: Edward See also: Bancroft (1744-1821), who by See also: act of parliament in 1785 was granted See also: special privileges in regard to the importation and use of the substance
.
The dyestuff is prepared by grinding the bark in mills after it has been freed from its black epidermal layer, and sifting the product to See also: separate the fibrous See also: matter, the fine yellow powder which remains forming the quercitron of commerce
.
The ruddy-orange decoction of quercitron contains quercitannic acid, whence its use in tanning, and an active dyeing principle, quercitrin, C21H220,2
.
The latter substance is a See also: glucoside, and in aqueous solution under the influence of See also: mineral acids it yields quercetin, C16H6007, which is precipitated, and the pentoside rhamnose
.
Quercetin is a crystalline powder of a brilliant citron yellow colour, entirely insoluble in cold and dissolving only sparingly in hot See also: water, but quite soluble in See also: alcohol
.
Either by itself or in some form of its glucoside quercitrin, quercetin is found in several See also: vegetable substances, among others in cutch, in Persian berries (Rhamnus catlaarticus), See also: buckwheat leaves (Polygonum Fagopyrum), See also: Zante fustic See also: wood (Rhus Cotinus), and in See also: rose petals, &c
.
Quercitron was first introduced as a yellow dye in 1775, but it is. principally used in the form of See also: flavin, which is the precipitate thrown down from a boiling decoction of quercitron by sulphuric acid
.
Chemically, quercetin is a member of a fairly extensive class of natural colouring matters derived from 13 phenyl benzo-y-pyrone or flavone, the constitution of which followed on the researches of St von Kostanecki, A
.
G
.
Perkin, Herzig, See also: Goldschmidt and others
.
Among the related colouring matters are: chrysin from See also: poplar buds, apigenin from See also: parsley, luteolin from weld and dyers' See also: broom, fisetin from See also: young fustic and yellow See also: cedar, galangin from galanga See also: root, and myricetin from Myrica Nagi
.
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