Carmine is the aluminum or calcium-aluminum lake, on an aluminum hydroxide substrate, obtained by an aqueous
extraction of the dried female insects of Dactylopius coccus Costa, enclosing young larvae. The primary source of the raw material
is from the Canary Islands and parts of South America. The coloring principle derived from carmine chiefly consists of carminic
acid (C22H20O13).
Carmine occurs as bright red, friable pieces or as a dark red powder. It is soluble in alkali solutions,
slightly soluble in hot water and practically insoluble in cold water and in dilute acids.
CARMINE
Carmine [CAS: 1390-65-4] is the trade name for the aluminum lake of the red anthraquinone dye carminic acid obtained from the cochineal bug. The dye is obtained from the powdery form of cochineal by extraction with hot water, the extracts treated with aluminum salts, and the dye precipitated from the solution by the addition of ethanol. This water-soluble bright red dye is used for coloring shrimp, pork sausages, pharmaceuticals, and cosmetics. It is the only animal-derived dye approved as a colorant for foods and other products.
Carmine is the red colorant aluminum lake of carminic acid which is
the coloring pigment obtained from dried bodies of the female
insect coccus cacti. it is brilliant red to purplish in color, having a
low tinctorial strength, and can be solubilized in ammonia. it is
used in a pink color in coatings.
carmine is a crimson pigment. This is the aluminum lake of the coloring agent cochineal, a natural pigment derived from the dried female insect Coccus cacti. Carmine may cause allergic reactions.
Essential oil composition
The kibble consists of high concentrations of fermentable sugars (glucose, fructose, sucrose and maltose), as
well as protein, pectin, cellulose, hemicellulose and polyphenols. The technical value within the seed endosperm is chemically
defined as a neutral galactomannan, a high molecular weight hydrocolloid polysaccharide (polymer). The galactomannan polymer
is composed of a 1,4-linked β-D-mannopyranosyl (mannose, 73 to 86% of molecule) units with single-side chains of α-Dgalactopyranosyl
(galactose, 14 to 27% of molecule) units irregularly attached to every fourth or fifth mannopyranosyl unit by
1,6-glycosidic linkages to the polymer.
Carmine (C.I. 75470) (calcium-aluminium lacquer of carminic acid) for microscopy Certistain?, is a dry dye that is used for the preparation of a staining solution for staining nuclei and for demonstration of glycogen in histological sections of human origin. As a Certistain? dye it is chemically quality-certified according to highest standards and strict specifications. As an IVD product and CE registered, it can be used hassle-free in diagnostics and laboratory accreditations. For more details, please see instructions for use (IFU). The IFU can be downloaded from this webpage.
Flammability and Explosibility
Not classified
When heated to
decomposition it emits acrid smoke and
irritating fumes.