Abstract
The author has found that many fat-soluble pigments, such as Sudan III and Scarlet R, readily diffuse from solid and liquid fats through rubber into various solid and liquid media, among them both solid fat and oil. Thus, when Sudan III is dissolved in melted lard, the red liquid poured into a rubber bag, the bag supported in melted lard in a bottle, and the apparatus promptly immersed in ice water—the fatty matter will congeal before any sign of pigmentary diffusion occurs, but, in a few hours, a reddish tinge will develop outside of the bag, and on each successive day for several weeks further extension of the pigmented matter may be witnessed, until the whole of the external lard is deeply suffused with red. This process takes place quite rapidly when the lard and apparatus are kept in a thermostat at 40° C.
The demonstrations were intended to exhibit a few instances of such pigmentary diffusions as occur speedily enough at room temperature to yield positive results within an hour. The appended summary indicates briefly the precise nature and results of the demonstrations (including two control tests—4 and 5), which were made with thin rubber bags in ordinary glass bottles.
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