CAS
NO. |
107-19-7 |
|
EINECS
NO. |
203-471-2 |
FORMULA |
HC¡ÕCCH2OH |
MOL
WT. |
56.06 |
H.S.
CODE |
2905.29.9000 |
UN
NO.
|
2929
|
TOXICITY
|
Oral rat
LD50: 20 mg/kg |
SYNONYMS |
2-Propyn-1-ol;
Acetyleneylcarbinol; Propyn-1-ol; Propargyl alcohol;
|
1-Propyne-3-ol; 2-Propynyl alcohol; Ethynylcarbinol;
Ethynyl methanol; Prop-2-yn-1-ol;
propiolic alcohol; Prop-2-in-1-ol (Spanish); Prop-2-yne-1-ol (French); Acetylene carbinol;
|
SMILES
|
C(#C)CO |
CLASSIFICATION
|
Alkyne, Acetylenic
alcohol |
EXTRA
NOTES
|
Irreversibly inactivates alcohol oxidase |
PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
|
PHYSICAL
STATE |
clear
liquid |
MELTING POINT |
<
-48 C |
BOILING
POINT |
114
- 115 C |
SPECIFIC GRAVITY |
0.96
- 0.97 |
SOLUBILITY
IN WATER |
miscible |
SOLVENT
SOLUBILITY |
Soluble in alcohol,
organic solvents, CCl4. Immiscible
with aliphatic hydrocarbon solvents. Miscible with benzene, chloroform, ethanol, ether, 1,2-dichloroethane, acetone,
dioxane, THF, pyridine |
VAPOR DENSITY |
1.93 |
AUTOIGNITION
|
400
C
|
log Pow |
(Octanol-water) |
VAPOR
PRESSURE |
15.6
(mmHg) |
HENRY LAW
CONSTANT |
1.15E-06
(atm-m3/mole at 25 C) |
OH RATE
CONSTANT |
1.04E-11
(cm3/molecule-sec
at 25 C Atmospheric) |
NFPA
RATINGS |
Health: 3; Flammability: 3; Reactivity: 3 |
REFRACTIVE
INDEX
|
1.432 |
FLASH
POINT |
33
C |
STABILITY |
Reacts violently with oxidants. |
EXTERNAL LINKS
&GENERAL
DESCRIPTION
|
Wikipedia
Linking
Google
Scholar Search
Material
Safety Data Sheet
GENERAL
DESCRIPTION: Propargyl Alcohol,
an C-3 alcohol containing acetylenic triple bond, is used as a corrosion inhibitor, metal complex
solution,
solvent stabilizer
and electroplating brightener additive. It is used as a biodegradable chemical intermediate to
make pesticides, biocides and pharmaceuticals. Propargyl describes the functional group of 2-propynyl
(HC¡ÕC-CH2-).
|
SALES
SPECIFICATION |
APPEARANCE
|
clear
liquid |
CONTENT
|
99.0%
min
|
WATER
|
0.5%
max
|
COLOR,
APHA |
20
max
|
TRANSPORTATION |
PACKING |
180kgs
in drum |
HAZARD CLASS |
6.1 (Packing Group: II) |
UN
NO. |
2929 |
OTHER
INFORMATION |
Hazard
Symbols: T C, Risk Phrases: 10-23-24/25/34, Safety Phrases: 9-16-26-28A-33/36/45 |
GENERAL
DESCRIPTION OF ALKYNE
|
Alkynes are aliphatic hydrocarbons that have one or more carbon-carbon triple
bonds. The general structure of the alkyne hydrocarbons with one triple bond is
CnH2n-2. They are insoluble in water but easily soluble in common organic
solvents of low polarity. The features of alkynes in chemical synthesis is due
to the acidity of hydrogen atoms bonded to triply bonded carbons as well as the
triple bonds themselves. Addition reactions are typical in alkyne reactions; halogenation, hydrogenation, hydrohalogenation, hydration, oxidative
cleavage, nitrile formation and acidity of terminal alkynes. Polymerisation and
substitution reactions are also useful in chemical synthesis.
- Addition Reactions
- Catalytic Hydrogenation by Pt and Pd hydrogenation
catalysts to yeild alkanes without isolation of alkene
intermediates.
- Catalytic Hydrogenation by Lindlar's catalyst to yeild cis- or
trans- alkenes without further reduction to alkanes
- Addition by Electrophilic
Reagents
- Addition of halides (chlorine, bromine, iodine) to yield dihalogen
substituted alkanes at the solid bond site
- Addition of hydrogen halides
(HCl, HBr, HI) to yield monohalogen substituted alkenes or dihalogen substituted
alkanes
- Hydration of alkynes to yield ketone products through enol tautomer
intermediate stage, whereas the hydration of solid bonds gives alcohol products
(exceptionally acetylene yields acetaldehyde ).
- Hydroboration by
disiamylborane to yield ketones or aldehydes
- Oxidation cleavages of the
triple-bond to give carboxylic acid products with oxidizing agents (potassium
permanganate and ozone)
- Nucleophilile Addition by sp-hybrid carbon atoms of
the triple-bond render alkynes (nitrile formation)
- Nucleophilile Reduction by solutions of
sodium in liquid ammonia to trans-alkenes
The name of all
alkynes end in "-yne" adding a prefix to indicate the location of the triple
bond in the molecule.
COMPOUND
|
SYNONYM
|
FORMULA
|
CAS
RN
|
M.P
(C)
|
B.P
(C)
|
Ethyne |
Acetylene |
C2H2 |
74-86-2 |
-84.0 |
-28 |
Propyne |
Methyl
acetylene |
C3H4 |
74-99-7 |
-103 |
-23 |
1,3-Butadiyne |
Diacetylene |
C4H2 |
460-12-8 |
|
10
|
1-Butyne |
Ethyl
acetylene |
C4H6 |
107-00-6 |
-125.7 |
8
|
2-Butyne |
Crotonylene |
C4H6 |
503-17-3 |
-32.2 |
27 |
1,3-Pentadiyne |
|
C5H4 |
4911-55-1 |
|
|
3-Penten-1-yne |
Propenyl acetylene |
C5H6 |
2206-23-7 |
|
|
2-Methyl-1-buten-3-yne |
Isopropenyl
acetylene |
C5H6 |
78-80-8 |
-113 |
32 |
1-Penten-3-yne
|
Methyl vinyl
acetylene |
C5H6 |
646-05-9 |
|
|
1-Penten-4-yne |
Allyl
acetylene |
C5H6 |
871-28-3 |
|
|
2-Pentyne |
Ethyl methyl
acetylene |
C5H8 |
627-21-4 |
-109 |
56 |
3-Methyl-1-butyne
|
Isopropyl
acetylene |
C5H8 |
598-23-2 |
-89.7 |
26
|
1-Pentyne |
Propyl
acetylene |
C5H8 |
627-19-0 |
-106 |
40
|
3-Hexyne |
Diethyl
acetylene |
C6H10 |
928-49-4 |
-103 |
81
|
2-Hexyne |
Methyl propyl
acetylene |
C6H10 |
764-35-2 |
-89.1 |
84
|
4-Methyl-1-pentyne
|
Isobutyl
acetylene
|
C6H10 |
7154-75-8 |
-105 |
61
|
1-Hexyne |
Butyl
acetylene |
C6H10 |
693-02-7 |
-131.9 |
71
|
3-Methyl-1-pentyne
|
sec-Butyl acetylene |
C6H10 |
922-59-8 |
|
58
|
4-Methyl-2-pentyne
|
Isopropyl methyl
acetylene |
C6H10 |
21020-27-9 |
-110 |
73
|
3,3-Dimethyl-1-butyne
|
tert-Butyl acetylene |
C6H10 |
917-92-0 |
-78.2 |
38 |
1,5-Hexadiyne |
Dipropargyl |
C6H6 |
628-16-0 |
-6 |
86
|
1,4-Hexadiyne |
|
C6H6 |
10420-91-4 |
|
79
|
1,5-Hexadien-3-yne
|
Divinyl
acetylene |
C6H6 |
821-08-9 |
|
|
1-Hexen-3-yne
|
Ethyl vinyl
acetylene
|
C6H8 |
13721-54-5 |
|
84
|
4-Methyl-2-hexyne
|
sec-Butyl methyl acetylene |
C7H12
|
20198-49-6 |
-108 |
100
|
2-Methyl-3-hexyne
|
Isopropyl ethyl
acetylene |
C7H12 |
|
-117 |
95
|
5-Methyl-2-hexyne
|
Isobutyl methyl
acetylene |
C7H12 |
53566-37-3 |
-93 |
102
|
3-Ethyl-1-pentyne |
|
C7H12 |
|
|
84 |
1-Heptyne |
n-Pentyl acetylene |
C7H12 |
628-71-7 |
-81 |
100
|
4,4-Dimethyl-2-pentyne
|
tert-Butyl methyl acetylene |
C7H12 |
999-78-0 |
|
83
|
3-Heptyne |
Ethyl propyl
acetylene |
C7H12 |
2586-89-2 |
-131 |
107
|
4,4-Dimethyl-1-pentyne
|
Neopentyl
acetylene |
C7H12 |
|
-75 |
78
|
2-Heptyne
|
n-Butyl methyl acetylene |
C7H12 |
1119-65-9 |
|
112
|
1,6-Heptadiyne |
|
C7H8 |
2396-63-6 |
|
108
|
1,7-Octadiyne |
|
C8H10 |
871-84-1 |
|
135
|
2,6-Octadiyne |
|
C8H10 |
764-73-8 |
|
|
Cyclooctyne |
|
C8H12 |
1781-78-8 |
|
|
4-Octyne |
Dipropyl
acetylene |
C8H14 |
1942-45-6 |
-102.5 |
132
|
1-Octyne |
n-Hexyl acetylene |
C8H14 |
629-05-0 |
-79.3 |
126 |
3-Octyne |
n-Butyl ethyl acetylene |
C8H14 |
15232-76-5 |
-104 |
133
|
2-Octyne
|
n-Pentyl methyl acetylene |
C8H14 |
2809-67-8 |
-61.6 |
138 |
1,8-Nonadiyne |
|
C9H12 |
2396-65-8 |
-21 |
|
Cyclononyne |
|
C9H14 |
6573-52-0 |
|
|
1-Nonyne |
n-Heptyl acetylene |
C9H16 |
3452-09-3 |
-50 |
151 |
3-Nonyne
|
Methyl n-pentyl acetylene |
C9H16 |
20184-89-8 |
|
157 |
2-Nonyne
|
n-Hexyl methyl acetylene |
C9H16 |
19447-29-1 |
|
162
|
4-Nonyne |
n-Butyl propyl acetylene |
C9H16 |
20184-91-2 |
|
|
Cyclodecyne |
|
C10H16 |
3022-41-1 |
|
|
5-Decyne |
Di-n-butyl
acetylene |
C10H18 |
1942-46-7 |
-73 |
|
3-Decyne |
Ethyl
n-hexyl acetylene |
C10H18 |
2384-85-2 |
|
179
|
1-Decyne |
n-Octyl acetylene |
C10H18 |
764-93-2 |
-44 |
174
|
2,2,5,5-Tetramethyl-3-hexyne
|
Di-tert-butyl acetylene |
C10H18 |
17530-24-4 |
|
|
1-Undecyne |
n-Nonyl acetylene |
C11H20 |
2243-98-3 |
-25 |
195
|
6-Dodecyne |
Di-n-pentyl
acetylene |
C12H22 |
6975-99-1 |
|
|
1-Dodecyne |
n-Decyl acetylene |
C12H22 |
765-03-7 |
-19 |
225
|
1-Tridecyne |
n-Undecyl
acetylene |
C13H24 |
26186-02-7 |
-5 |
234
|
1-Tetradecyne |
n-Dodecyl
acetylene |
C14H26 |
765-10-6 |
|
252
|
1-Pentadecyne |
n-Tridecyl
acetylene |
C15H28 |
765-13-9 |
10 |
269
|
1-Hexadecyne
|
n-Tetradecyl acetylene |
C16H30 |
629-74-3 |
25 |
285 |
1-Heptadecyne
|
n-Pentadecyl acetylene |
C17H32 |
26186-00-5 |
22 |
300
|
1-Heptadecyne
|
n-Pentadecyl acetylene |
C17H32 |
26186-00-5 |
22 |
300
|
2-Octadecyne |
|
C18H34 |
|
|
325
|
1-Octadecyne |
|
C18H34 |
629-89-0 |
|
|
1-Nonadecyne |
|
C19H36 |
|
33 |
329
|
1-Eicosyne |
1-Icosyne |
C20H38 |
|
36 |
342 |
|
PRICE
INFORMATION
|
|