Picric AcidPicral 4%
Picral
General Purpose
Composition
4% Picric Acid in Ethanol
4%
Method
Immersion
Time
5–60 s
Alternative Names
Tags
Reveals
Pearlite lamellar detail (carbide-step morphology); spheroidized carbides; tempered carbide distribution; cementite networks in hyper-eutectoid steels
Typical Results
The picric-acid etchant. Attacks cementite, not ferrite, resolving pearlite lamellae with high clarity and showing tempered-carbide distribution in quench-and-tempered steels. Does not reveal ferrite grain boundaries; pair with Nital when both phases are needed. Standard for spheroidized and over-aged steel structures.
Application Method
Method:Immersion
Typical Time:5–60 s
Preparation Notes
Mix 4 g picric acid with 100 ml ethanol. Warm slightly to dissolve. CAUTION: Picric acid is explosive when dry.
Application Notes
Immerse 5–60 s at room temperature. Rinse with ethanol then water. Dry promptly; never let picric solution dry on the sample.
Troubleshooting
PICRIC ACID: never allow the solution to dry. Dry picric crystals are shock-sensitive explosives. Keep at least 10% water above the solid at all times.
Storage Notes
Amber glass with water always above any settled solid. Inspect monthly for evaporation; add water as needed. EXPLOSIVE WHEN DRY.
Alternative Etchants
- 2% Nital
- Vilella's Reagent
- Murakami's Reagent
Similar Etchants
- 2% Nital