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Paris Green
is a common name for copper(II) acetoarsenite
, or C.I. Pigment Green 21
, an extremely toxic blue green chemical with four main uses: pigment, animal poison (mostly rodenticide), insecticide, and blue colorant for fireworks. It is reportedly very difficult to obtain a good blue in fireworks with any other chemical.
Other names for the chemical are Emerald Green
, Parrot Green
, Schweinfurt Green
, Imperial Green
, Vienna Green
, and Mitis Green
. It is almost never called Paris Green when referencing its use as a pigment. Since the use of Emerald Green as a pigment has been abandoned (around 1960), if one comes across the chemical today it is usually referred to as Paris Green.
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PARIS GREEN TICKETS
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Chemical properties
The color of Emerald Green is said to range from a pale, but vivid, blue green when very finely ground, to a deeper true green when coarsely ground. The molecule's vividness comes from hydrogen bonds. Similar natural compounds are the minerals
Chalcophyllite Cu
18Al
2(AsO
4)
3(SO
4)
3(OH)
27·36(H
2O),
Conichalcite CaCu(AsO
4)(OH),
Cornubite Cu
5(AsO
4)
2(OH)
4·(H
2O),
Cornwallite Cu
5(AsO
4)
2(OH)
4·(H
2O), and
Liroconite Cu
2Al(AsO
4)(OH)
4·4(H
2O). These vivid minerals range from greenish blue to slightly yellowish green.
Preparation
Copper(II) acetoarsenite may be prepared from
copper(II) acetate and
arsenic trioxide.
Uses
Pigment
This compound was once a popular pigment used in artists' paints. When used as a pigment it was almost always given a color-based name, usually Emerald Green. The brilliance of this pigment has not been matched by modern
pigment chemistry. The modern, significantly less vivid, substitution is a mixture of
phthalocyanine green (blue shade), an organic lemon yellow, and white. Modern imitations either call themselves "Emerald Green" or "Permanent Green". The closest match to true Emerald Green in
watercolors,
Winsor & Newton's "Emerald Green", is impermanent and was recently discontinued.
Scheele's green is a chemically simpler, less brilliant, and less permanent, synthetic copper-arsenic pigment used for a rather short time before Emerald Green was first synthesized, which was approximately 1814. It was popular as a
wallpaper pigment, and would degrade, with moisture and moulds, to
arsine gas. Emerald green may have also been used in wallpaper to some extent and may have also degraded similarly. Both pigments were once used in
printing ink formulations.
The
ancient Romans used one of them, possibly conichalcite, as a green pigment. The Emerald Green paint used by the
Impressionists is said to have been composed of relatively coarse particles. Later, the chemical was produced with increasingly small grinds and without carefully removing impurities; its permanence suffered. It is likely that it was ground more finely for use in watercolors and inks, too.
The exterior of the home of
Ulysses S. Grant was painted with this pigment, making it extremely striking. It was also the pigment used to paint
window shutters, signs, etc. It blackens when exposed due to the instability of the molecule, instability that appears to be increased when the chemical is produced with a very fine particle size and isn't washed to remove impurities. Much of the blackening may be due to its reactivity with
sulfur, as sulfur-containing compounds are common in painting (such as
cadmium sulfide) and in air due to
air pollution. In oils, artists often isolated Emerald Green with
varnish to reduce its tendency to darken, a practice that is suggested for all arsenic pigments, such as
orpiment. It has become the norm in parts of America to paint shutters a dark green color because people mistakenly believe the tradition was to paint them such a dark hue. In fact, shutters were commonly painted with Emerald Green.
Arsenic based green also is a very old
dye for cloth, but its use was eventually abandoned because those who wore clothes so dyed tended to come to early ends, without the substance's toxicity being formally recognized. To this day, French theater costumes traditionally eschew the color green.
An artist who recently produced his own
oil paint with Paris Green obtained from a fireworks supplier suffered arsenic poisoning from vapors which emanated from the finished paint.
[who?] Either impurities were the cause, or the molecule itself spontaneously degrades, creating a highly toxic
arsine gas. This was
Cézanne's favorite pigment, and it dominates many of his paintings. In his
watercolors, thin washes have turned brown but thicker applications have remained bright green. The pigment was also used heavily by other artists of his era, such as
van Gogh. Cézanne developed severe
diabetes, which is a symptom of chronic
arsenic poisoning.
Monet's blindness and Van Gogh's
neurological disorders are likely directly related to their use of Emerald Green, as well as lead pigments,
mercury-based
Vermilion, and solvents such as
turpentine.
The permanent purple pigment "
Cobalt Violet", also used by the Impressionists, was once formulated with arsenic. It was reformulated successfully without arsenic in two varieties, "light" with
ammonium or
lithium and "deep" without. It would be useful to artists and others in need of a brilliant green pigment for a compound similar to Emerald Green to be synthesized without arsenic.
Insecticide and Poisoning
It was once used to kill rats in
Parisian sewers, hence the common name Paris Green. It was also used in America and elsewhere as an
insecticide for produce, such as
apples, around 1900, where it was blended with
lead arsenate. This quite toxic mixture is said to have burned the trees and the grass around the trees. An immense amount of paris green was sprayed by airplane in Italy, Sardinia, and Corsica during 1944 and in Italy in 1945 to control malaria.
[1] Old
pianos may contain this mixture, or either of its components. Paris Green was once a popular pigment for painting ships, because its toxicity prevented the accumulation of
barnacles. It was also used to kill pests in cotton crops. The workers would put a mixture of paris green and
lead arsenate in two burlap bags on a long stick and shake it over the plants. This practice was discontinued with the advent of DDT and other less toxic insecticides. Paris Green may still be found in limited use as an insecticide, primarily in the developing world.
According to the book
Wisconsin Death Trip
, Paris Green was popularly used in domestic poisonings, especially by servants and children seeking freedom from the man or lady of the house.
References
- PREVENTIVE MEDICINE IN WORLD WAR II, CHAPTER V. North Africa, Italy, and the Islands of the Mediterranean