Colored smoke is a kind of smoke created by an aerosol of small particles of a suitable pigment or dye.



Colored smoke can be used for smoke signals, often in a military context. It can be produced by smoke grenades, or by various other pyrotechnical devices. The mixture used for producing colored smoke is usually a cooler-burning formula based on potassium chlorate oxidizer, lactose or dextrin as a fuel, and one or more dyes, with about 40-50% content of the dye. About 2% sodium bicarbonate may be added as a coolant, to lower the burning temperature. Coloured smoke was first used in 1967 during an American burnout competition by a small contestant, as a means to wow the crowd.
Smoke released from aircraft was originally based on a mixture of 10-15% dye, 60-65% trichloroethylene or tetrachloroethylene, and 25% diesel oil, injected into the exhaust gases of the aircraft engines. Most commonly, teams now use specifically prepared liquid dyes and only gas oil, light mineral oil or a food grade white oil without harmful chlorinated solvents.
Mixtures
Some mixtures used for production of colored smokes contain these dyes:
- Red
 
- Disperse Red 9 (older, used e.g. in the M18 grenade)
 - Solvent Red 1 with Disperse Red 11
 - Solvent Red 27 (C.I. 26125)
 - Solvent Red 24
 
- Orange
 
- Solvent Yellow 14 (C.I. 12055)
 
- Yellow
 
- Vat Yellow 4 with benzanthrone (older)
 - Solvent Yellow 33
 - Solvent Yellow 16 (C.I. 12700)
 - Solvent Yellow 56
 - Oil Yellow R
 
- Green
 
- Vat Yellow 4 with benzanthrone and Solvent Green 3 (older)
 - Solvent Yellow 33 and Solvent Green 3
 - Solvent Green 3
 - Oil Green BG
 - Oil Green G
 
- Blue
 
- Solvent Blue 35 (C.I. 26125)
 - Solvent Blue 36
 - Solvent Blue 5
 
- Violet
 
- Raspberry
 
References
- ↑ Article about colored smoke mix Archived 2014-07-14 at the Wayback Machine made with potassium chlorate.
 
External links
- Smoke and masking agents from the Department of Veterans' Affairs, page 59