Ink Chromatography

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Ink Chromatography

Paper Chromatography
http://www.msichicago.org/fileadmin/Education/learninglabs/lab_downloads/EvidenceLab_ink_act.pdf

Chromatography
Method for analyzing mixtures by separating into their components. It
can be used to separate mixtures like ink, blood, gasoline, and lipstick.
In ink chromatography, you are separating the colored pigments that
make up the color of the ink. Even though a pen will only write in one
color, the ink is actually made from mixture of different colored
pigments. To perform ink chromatography, you put a small dot of ink to
be separated at one end of a strip of paper and then placed in a solvent.
The solvent moves up the paper strip, and, as it travels upward it
dissolves the mixture of chemicals and pulls them up the paper. The
chemicals that dissolve best in the solvent will move up the paper strip
further than chemicals that do not dissolve as well. What is produced
from this method is a chromatogram. Forensic scientists are able to use
ink chromatography to solve crimes by matching documents or stains
found at a crime scene to the marker or pen that belongs to a suspect.

Materials
Filter paper
Different brands of black markers
Scissors
Small cups or beakers- one for each marker tested
Rulers
Calculators
Reference Library Pages
Water

Procedure
1. Pour about 10 ml of water into a beaker or small cup.

2. Cut a strip of filter paper to form a point at one end.


3. Choose a marker to test. Record the brand of marker on your Reference

Library Page. Use the marker to make a good-sized dot of color (like the
size of a grain of rice) about 1.5 cm up from the pointed end of the
paper. (Assign the marker a letter or code so you remember which
marker is which.)
4. Use a pencil and make a mark on the paper strip beside the ink dot
5. Lower the pointed end of the paper into the solvent BUT make sure the
color dot stays above the solvent level. Carefully push something

through the top of the paper to hold the strip at just the right level in

Procedure continued
6. The solvent should immediately start moving up the paper strip
carrying the ink pigments with it. While waiting for the solvent to rise
toward the top of the paper, set up your other beakers and test the

other markers.
7. When the solvent has finished moving up the paper strip, you can

remove the paper from the test tube and immediately mark with a
pencil the highest point the solvent traveled up the paper strip.
8. Let the strip dry and tape it on your Reference Library Page under its
correct brand name.
9. Continue testing all of the ink samples, including the unknown.

Calculating Rf values
Every marker company produces their markers using their own secret mixtures of
colored compounds. Calculating the retention factor provides more information that
can help forensic scientists match and determine what brand of marker or pen was left
at a crime scene. To prove that an ink sample is a certain brand you will also need to
calculate the Rf (retention factor) values of the dierent colored chemicals present in
the marker. Rf is a calculation that compares the distance the solvent traveled up the
paper strip to the distance a pigment traveled up the same strip

1. Look closely at each markers chromatography strip. How many dierent colors are
present in each ink sample? Record the Total Number of Colors present for each ink
sample on your Reference Library Page.

Calculating Rf values
2. Measure the distance (mm) from the original color dot to the nal point the solvent traveled.
The distance you just measured is the solvent distance measurement. Record it in the correct
location on your Reference Library Page.

3. Measure in millimeters from the original color dot to the highest point the rst colored
pigment (Colored Pigment #1) traveled up the strip. This is the pigment distance measurement
for Colored Pigment #1. Record this measurement in the correct location for Colored Pigment #1.

4. Repeat for any other Colored Pigments


5. Calculate the Rf Value using the following formula:

Rf=

Distance traveled by solute (pigments in ink)


Distance traveled by solvent (water)

6. Record the Rf values for each colored pigment in the ink on your Reference Library Page.

7. Repeat these measurements and Rf calculations for each of the markers tested.
8. Calculate Rf value for unknown sample and compare to determine which marker wrote note.

Reference Library for Ink Samples & their Colored Pigments


Tape Strip Here

Tape Strip Here

Tape Strip Here

Post Lab Questions


1. In this experiment, what is the purpose of the water?

2. Do you think permanent markers would have reacted the same in the water? Why or
why not?
3. Do you think linking a brand of marker or pen to the crime is enough evidence to
convict a suspect? Why or why not?
4. Did any of the marker samples have the same chromatography results? If so, which
ones?
5. Do you think the chromatograms would be the same if a different solvent was used
(such as isopropyl alcohol)?

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