[Histonet] a much easier chemistry question

Jackie M O'Connor Jackie.O'Connor <@t> abbott.com
Fri Nov 5 12:32:01 CST 2004


Hasn't anyone tried Oxy Clean?  I even use it on my white show dogs (then 
a little bit of Downy in the rinse water to make their coats soft).  They 
smell good, too.
Jackie O'




Ford Royer <froyer <@t> bitstream.net>
Sent by: histonet-bounces <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
11/05/2004 11:36 AM

 
        To:     Histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: [Histonet] a much easier chemistry question


Years ago, Scientific Products made a lanolin-based cream stain remover 
that worked great in removing biological stains.  It worked like magic 
on stain on hands and lab surfaces.  One day, out of frustration, I 
tried it on my white lab coat (stained with methylene blue) and it 
worked fine.  I rubbed the cream into the stain, and then washed to coat 
in the washing machine... stain all gone!  I check a recent (1997) 
Allegiance catalog, and they still showed this product.  Called 
"Dye-Sol" and the catalog number was C6345.  All the S/P products are 
now carried by Cardinal so you could contact them to see if they still 
carry it.  They should be able to cross-reference the old Allegiance 
cat. no.

Good Luck!

~ Ford

Ford M. Royer, MT(ASCP)
Midwest Science Biocenter
Minneapolis, MN

John Kiernan wrote:

>Your unsuccessful efforts were all acidic, 
>neutral or hydrophobic. Trypan and Evans blue are 
>anionic dyes with large, very hydrophilic molecules.
>Alkaline solutions extract anionic dyes, and urea 
>(high concentration) can disrupt the non-ionic, 
>non-covalent bonding that holds large hydrophilic
>dye molecules to substrates such as cellulose (cotton). 
>
>Try a strong urea solution (8M=48%) made alkaline
>with borax or washing soda. Geoff McAuliffe's
>simpler suggestion of soap and water may work,
>because soap is alkaline. 
>
>Keep us informed. All who use dyes need this sort
>of information. (I have a grey tie with alcian 
>blue spots dating from the 1960s; wouldn't want to 
>remove them now, though I'm sure it would be
>impossible without dissolving the fabric.)
>
>John Kiernan
>London, Canada
>-------------------------------------
>Jack England wrote:
> 
>
>>Aloha all,
>>
>>Here's a much more fun chemistry question for anyone that wants to bite:
>>what is the best method to remove trypan/evans blue from cotton fabric? 
One
>>of my colleagues got some on her pants the other day and asked what the 
best
>>way to get it out was.  I did not know, so I put some on cotton gauze, 
and
>>tried:
>>
>>--acid alcohol...faded the stain a little, but didn't get rid of it
>>--DI water...no change
>>--absolute ethanol...no change
>>--xylene...no change
>>--ethanol/non-ionic detergent/DI water rinse...no change
>>--citrus oil clearant...no change
>>
>>Given that her fabric is tan (and thus not white, and thus likely not
>>bleach-able), can anyone out there in histo-land suggest a way of
>>de-staining trypan-blue-stained fabric? I've been wondering about this 
for a
>>while now and figured I'd pass it around.
>>
>>--Many thanks and aloha to all,
>>Jack England
>>Tissue Genesis, Inc.
>>http://www.tissuegenesis.com
>>
>>_________________________________________________________________
>>Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today - it's 
FREE!
>>hthttp://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/
>>
>>_______________________________________________
>>Histonet mailing list
>>Histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
>>http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
>> 
>>
>
>_______________________________________________
>Histonet mailing list
>Histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
>http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
>
> 
>
_______________________________________________
Histonet mailing list
Histonet <@t> lists.utsouthwestern.edu
http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet





More information about the Histonet mailing list