I found someone do this experiment, but fail to get the unchangeable colour after yellow light through a second prism.
https://www1.umn.edu/ships/updates/newton1.htm
Much later, in the 1720s (after Newton's 1704 Opticks), Giovanni Rizzetti, in Venice, specificed his own conditions for what constituted a good experiment with two prisms:
care is to be taken that the second prism is not too distant from the first, nor the slit, through which the light of one colour is transmitted from refraction at the first prism to the second, is too narrow.
These, of course, were exactly the opposite of Newton's criteria. And the conclusions that Rizzetti reached were likewise quite different. For him, pure yellow light transformed itself, upon a second refraction, into red, green and indigo--with the yellow itself disappearing.
https://books.google.com.hk/books?id=Bk4sUpSx1LsC&printsec=frontcover&hl=zh-TW#v=onepage&q&f=false
page 98
The English claimed that Rizzetti, having made use of Prisms made at Venice, which are not of so pure a Cristall as ours, has been led into
the many mistakes he has asserted for convincing proofs.
The result is denied because the prism is made at Venice.
page 99
Algarotti reported that when he had tried the experimentum crucis he had failed to produce unchangeable colours,
because our Prisms in Italy are of no other use than to amuse Children or hang up as a fine shew in some window in
the country'. In contrast, the 'crucial' experiment worked well with prisms sent from England;'these we esteemed as sacred.
Not only one people can not see the unchangeble colour when do this experiment.
I also found someone do this experiment, and below is the result when yellow, green and light blue through the second prism.
http://southerncrossreview.org/74/tao-colors-2.html
The yellow light through second prism result is similar to Rizzetti's result, it splitting into red, green and blue with yellow itself disappearing.