Madder (Rubia tinctorum L.) has been used as a dye for over 2000 years with alizarin and purpurin the major natural dyes analysed from extractions undertaken. The use of ethanol as the solvent in the extraction process produced an extract that yielded four anthraquinone compounds lucidin primeveroside, ruberythric acid, alizarin and lucidin-ω-ethyl ether. Gravitational separation of the extract was used to record the first crystal structure of lucidin primeveroside, which is also the first ever known crystal structure of a glycoside containing anthraquinone moiety. The crystal structure along with 1H and 13C NMR helped elucidate and confirm the structure of this overlooked natural dye which has been shown to be a major compound in R. tincto...
In this paper, a sensitive quantification high performance liquid chromatographic method for analysi...
International audienceIn the plant kingdom, numerous pigments have already been identified, but only...
Madder, used as a red dye, contains anthraquinones, and some of these can react with DNA possibly ca...
Red coloration of textiles from extracts of various madder species (Rubia spp) is a longstanding tra...
The complex mixtures of colorants present in different madder species can provide significant inform...
<p>The roots of <em>Rubia tinctorum</em> L. (madder) are the source of a natural d...
The roots of Rubia tinctorum L. (madder) are the source of a natural dye. The dye components are ant...
Madder (Rubia tinctorum L.) has been widely used as a red dye throughout history. Acid-sensitive col...
Madder (Rubia tinctorum L.) has been exploited as a dye throughout history. The roots of the plant a...
This thesis describes the effects of different solvents have on the extraction profile of natural dy...
Textiles coloration using extracts from the roots of various madder species (Rubia spp.) has been pe...
Direct and indirect HPLC-UV methods for the quantitative determination of anthraquinones in dried ma...
Dyers madder (Rubia tinctorum L.) has been famously used throughout history as a source of red dye. ...
For the production of a commercially useful dye extract from madder, the glycoside ruberythric acid ...
For the production of a commercially useful dye extract from madder, the glycoside ruberythric acid ...
In this paper, a sensitive quantification high performance liquid chromatographic method for analysi...
International audienceIn the plant kingdom, numerous pigments have already been identified, but only...
Madder, used as a red dye, contains anthraquinones, and some of these can react with DNA possibly ca...
Red coloration of textiles from extracts of various madder species (Rubia spp) is a longstanding tra...
The complex mixtures of colorants present in different madder species can provide significant inform...
<p>The roots of <em>Rubia tinctorum</em> L. (madder) are the source of a natural d...
The roots of Rubia tinctorum L. (madder) are the source of a natural dye. The dye components are ant...
Madder (Rubia tinctorum L.) has been widely used as a red dye throughout history. Acid-sensitive col...
Madder (Rubia tinctorum L.) has been exploited as a dye throughout history. The roots of the plant a...
This thesis describes the effects of different solvents have on the extraction profile of natural dy...
Textiles coloration using extracts from the roots of various madder species (Rubia spp.) has been pe...
Direct and indirect HPLC-UV methods for the quantitative determination of anthraquinones in dried ma...
Dyers madder (Rubia tinctorum L.) has been famously used throughout history as a source of red dye. ...
For the production of a commercially useful dye extract from madder, the glycoside ruberythric acid ...
For the production of a commercially useful dye extract from madder, the glycoside ruberythric acid ...
In this paper, a sensitive quantification high performance liquid chromatographic method for analysi...
International audienceIn the plant kingdom, numerous pigments have already been identified, but only...
Madder, used as a red dye, contains anthraquinones, and some of these can react with DNA possibly ca...