Looking for oxidizing color-changing material

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around finding a material or paint that changes color when exposed to air, specifically seeking a high-contrast transition (like white to black) that occurs quickly (within 1 to 20 seconds), is irreversible, non-toxic, and affordable. Initial thoughts included the natural browning of apples as a reference point. Suggestions included photochromic pigments, which change color in response to UV light but are not suitable for indoor use and are reversible. A mention of Dulux's "magic" white paint, which turns from pink to white as it dries, highlights the challenge of achieving a fast reaction. The conversation emphasizes the difficulty in finding a suitable dye that reacts with oxygen consistently, indicating that while such materials may exist, specific details and options remain unclear.
Tommy_P
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Hi,

I wonder if there is a material or paint/dye that would change color when exposed to air? Ideally, it should have the following properties:

White-to-black, black-to-white, or any other high contrast color transition (e.g, yellow-to-brown would work too)
Works under normal conditions
Transition should occur within seconds (e.g., anywhere between 1 and 20 seconds)
Color change is irreversible
Non-toxic
Reasonably cheap

Thank you for any tips! :smile:

P.S. As you can probably tell from my question, I'm totally not an expert in materials or chemistry, so please answer in "plain English". :smile:

P.P.S. Also, the first thing that comes to mind is how an apple turns brown when one bites off a piece. I think this is kind of the effect I'm looking for.
 
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Hi, everybody. So no answers... which means there's no such thing?

Well, is there any other method to achieve a similar color-changing effect? I'm thinking Transitions lenses that react to UV. It is different from what I'm after in several aspects:
1. Doesn't work indoors
2. Reversible and expensive

Any thoughts? Thanks!
Tom
 
Thanks, B0b-A! I had a hunch these paints do exist. The only problem, they react to UV, so won't work indoors. Also this will probably work differently on a sunny day vs an overcast day. That's why initially I was hoping to find an oxidizing dye, because the % of oxygen is always about the same everywhere.
 
Dulux have "magic" white paint which is pink until it dries white in about an hour ...

https://www.dulux.co.uk/shop/interior-paints/magic-white-silk

Ideal if you want temporary pink graffiti on a white wall :smile:
 
Fast reaction (within seconds) can be difficult, but there should be plenty of dyes capable of reacting with air oxygen and substantially changing their color. Trick is - while I am pretty sure they must exist, I have no idea about details.
 
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