For practical reasons, the inks are listed here according to their method of development. It must be understood however that some inks – particularly those of organic origin or those consisting of a mixture of several chemicals – may be made visible by several methods. For example, invisible writing with soap water may be made visible either by heat, reaction with phenolphthalein, viewing under ultraviolet light, or by placing the page inside an iodine fume cupboard.
Inks developed by heat Some of these are organic substances that oxidize when heated, which usually turns them brown. For this type of "heat fixed" ink, any acidic fluid will work. The most secure way to use any of the following substances for invisible ink is by dilution, usually with water, close to the point when they become difficult to develop. • Cola drink • Honey solution, sugar (sugar turns into
caramel by dehydration) • Lemon, apple, orange or onion juice (organic acids and the paper forms
ester under heat) • Milk (lactose dehydrates) • Bodily fluids such as blood
serum. • Soap solution (
carboxylic partially oxidizes) •
Soybean juice • Wine, or vinegar •
Cobalt chloride, which turns blue when heated and becomes invisible again after a while (if not overly heated) The writing is rendered visible by
heating the paper, either on a
radiator, by
ironing it, using a hair dryer, or by placing it in an
oven. A 100-watt
light bulb is less likely to damage the paper.
Inks developed by chemical reaction In most cases, these substance changes color when mixed with an
acid or
base. •
Phenolphthalein, commonly used as a
pH indicator, turns pink in the presence of a base such as
ammonia fumes or
sodium carbonate. •
Vinegar, is revealed by red cabbage water Vinegar contains
acetic acid that affects the pH indicator in red cabbage water. Vinegar may also be developed by heat. •
Ammonia, developed by red cabbage water. •
Semen, developed . •
Copper sulfate, developed by
sodium iodide,
sodium carbonate,
ammonium hydroxide or
potassium ferricyanide. •
Lead(II) nitrate, developed by
sodium iodide. •
Iron(II) sulfate, developed by
sodium carbonate or
potassium ferricyanate. •
Cobalt(II) chloride, developed by
potassium ferricyanide. •
Iron(III) sulfate, developed by
sodium sulfide. •
Starch, developed by
iodine solution which turns starch dark blue and the paper light blue. •
Lemon juice, developed by
iodine solution (ink turns white, paper turns light blue). •
Sodium chloride (common table salt), developed by
silver nitrate. •
Cerium oxalate developed by
manganese sulfate and
hydrogen peroxide Inks visible under ultraviolet light Some inks glow faintly (
fluoresce) when under an
ultraviolet lamp. This is a property of many substances, particularly organic substances and body fluids. Other inks work in a near opposite way by ultraviolet light but without fluorescing. When these are used on
fluorescent paper, the inked areas fluoresce less than the surrounding paper area when under an ultraviolet lamp. This is especially a property of inks with a yellow tint. Some UV-visible inks may be detected on a photocopy, due to the relatively strong ultraviolet component in light from the photocopier scanning head. Examples of inks revealed by ultraviolet light are: •
Laundry detergents containing
optical brighteners •
Soap • Body fluids,
serum,
saliva • Sunscreen • Lemon juice
Inks which alter the surface of paper This includes virtually all invisible inks, but pure distilled water can also be used in this way. Application of any fluid will alter the paper surface fibers or sizing. Fumes created from heating iodine crystals will develop the writing, which will appear brown because the iodine sticks preferentially to the altered areas of the paper. Exposing the paper to strong sunlight will return the writing to its invisible state, as will using a bleach solution. Slightly dampening paper with a sponge or by steam and then drying it before writing a message will prevent writing from being developed by this method, but overdoing dampening will result in telltale paper cockling. == Modern usage ==