Tartrazine

March 24, 2025
I’m an artificial dye that can provide transparent views of living tissue.
What molecule am I?
Image of Tartrazine 3D Image of Tartrazine

Tartrazine came into being in the late 19th century. Swiss dye chemist Johann Heinrich Ziegler at Bindschedler'sche Fabrik für Chemische Industrie (Basel) developed the yellow azo dye in 1884 and published his results in 1887. By the 1890s, the process was being used for fabric dye and food coloring. Today, tartrazine is known by several names throughout the world (e.g., FD&C Yellow 5, E102, Acid Yellow 23); it is used in foods, cosmetics, and paints.

Tartrazine’s chemical properties, however, make it much more significant than a safe, readily available dye. It has sharp absorption resonances in the near-UV spectrum (300–400 nm) and the blue region of the visible spectrum (400–500 nm).

Biology researchers want to develop deep-tissue optical imaging methods that can penetrate opaque tissue and are suitable for living animals. Last year, in a counterintuitive hypothesis, Mark L. Brongersma, Guosong Hong, and a large team of co-workers at Stanford University (CA) suggested that strongly absorbing molecules, such as those in dyes, can achieve optical transparency in live biological tissues. After testing 21 dyes, they found that tartrazine’s absorption range meets that requirement.

The team first applied tartrazine to slices of chicken breast and “watched them turn into what looked like a see-through jelly”. They then moved on to tests on mice. By massaging the dye into a mouse’s scalp, they were able to see the cerebral blood vessels; an application on a mouse’s abdomen allowed them to watch it digest its latest meal. The transparent effect lasted 10–20 minutes; the dye is easily washed off.

The medical possibilities for noninvasive in vivo testing are far-ranging. The path to use on humans, however, will not be easy; human skin presents myriad variations to challenge researchers.

For more information about tartrazine, see the ScienceDirect topics page.

Tartrazine hazard information*

Hazard class**GHS code and hazard statement
Acute toxicity, oral, category 4H302—Harmful if swallowedChemical Safety Warning
Skin corrosion/irritation, category 3H316—Causes mild skin irritation
Skin sensitization, category 1H317—May cause an allergic skin reactionChemical Safety Warning
Serious eye damage/eye irritation, category 2BH320—Causes eye irritation
Acute toxicity, inhalation, category 5H333—May be harmful if inhaled
Respiratory sensitization, category 1H334—May cause allergy or asthma symptoms or breathing difficulties if inhaledChemical Safety Warning

*Compilation of multiple safety data sheets, in which hazard statements vary considerably. Others state, “not a hazardous substance or mixture”.
**Globally Harmonized System (GHS) of Classification and Labeling of Chemicals. Explanation of pictograms.

Molecules from the Journals

Thiophene sulfone1 (aka thiophene S,S-dioxide) is formally an oxidation product of thiophene2, but the direct oxidation of thiophene leads mostly to other products. In 1953, William J. Bailey and Earl W. Cummins at Wayne University and the University of Maryland (both in College Park, MD) were the first to synthesize it in a complex six-step procedure beginning from butadiene sulfone3 (better known as sulfolene).

In recent decades, thiophene sulfone and its derivatives have been studied for their applications in electronics and optics. In 1998, for example, Giovanna Barbarella at Area Ricerca C.N.R. (Bologna Italy), Olga Pudova at the Latvian Institute of Organic Synthesis (Riga), and collaborators at other institutions reported that oligothiophene S,S-dioxides had high electron affinities, increased electron delocalization, and decreased HOMO–LUMO energy gaps compared with their non-oxide counterparts.

Last month, Panče Naumov, Jialiang Xu, and colleagues, principally at New York University Abu Dhabi and Nankai University (Tianjin, China), described single-crystal thiophene sulfone as a “thermally responsive molecular crystal that exhibits both structural and optical reversibility”. They stated that the crystal is “a favorable choice for prototypical low-power precision applications such as microactuators, soft robotics, and wearable devices”.

Gypsum4 (calcium sulfate dihydrate, CaSO4•2H2O) is a common mineral and a major byproduct of phosphoric acid manufacture. It is widely used in agriculture as a calcium and sulfur nutrient and for improving soil structure. It is also used in construction, especially for manufacturing drywall. It was first mentioned in the literature in 1903 by German chemist Paul Rohland in an article about the conversions among gypsum, its half-hydrate (CaSO4•½H2O, plaster of Paris), and anhydrite (CaSO4).

Last month, Merve Yeşilbaş and colleagues at the SETI Institute (Mountain View, CA), Umeå University (Sweden), Caltech (Pasadena, CA), and Université Grenoble Alpes (France) reported that geochemical transformations of gypsum in various environments on Earth may have implications for calcium sulfate detection and potential water flow on Mars. Their experiments demonstrated two ways that gypsum could dehydrate under Martian conditions: loss of water from gypsum at ≈110 ºC (below the Martian surface) and the interaction of gypsum and chloride salts to displace water.

1. CAS Reg. No. 27092-46-2.
2. CAS Reg. No. 110-02-1.
3. CAS Reg. No. 77-79-2.
4. CAS Reg. No. 10101-41-4.

Molecules from the Journals

MOTW briefly describes noteworthy molecules that appeared in recent ACS journal articles. See this week's edition.

This molecule was suggested by a reader. We present almost all of the molecules suggested by our readers. If you have a molecule you would like us to consider, please send us a message. And thank you for your interest in Molecule of the Week! —Ed.


Tartrazine fast facts

CAS Reg. No.1934-21-0
SciFindern name1H-Pyrazole-3-
carboxylic acid, 4,5-
dihydro-5-oxo-1-(4-
sulfophenyl)-4-[2-(4-
sulfophenyl)diazenyl]-,
sodium salt (1:3)
Empirical
formula
C16H9N4Na3O9S2
Molar mass534.36 g/mol
AppearanceBright orange-yellow powder
Melting point>300 ºC (dec.)
Water
solubility
200 g/L (25 ºC)
Chemical Abstract Service - a division of ACS

Learn more about this molecule from CAS, the most authoritative and comprehensive source for chemical information.

Molecule of the Week needs your suggestions!

If your favorite molecule is not in our archive, please send us a message. The molecule can be notable for its current or historical importance or for any quirky reason. Thank you!

Stay Ahead of the Chemistry Curve

Learn how ACS can help you stay ahead in the world of chemistry.