DIETHYL AZODICARBOXYLATE

Diazocarboxylic acid ethyl ester; Diethoxycarbonyldiazene; Diethyl azodiformate; Diethyl diazodicarboxylate; Ethyl azodicarboxylate; DEAD; Acetyloxymethyldiazenylmethyl acetate;

 DIETHYL AZODICARBOXYLATE

 

PRODUCT IDENTIFICATION

CAS RN

1972-28-7

EINECS RN

217-821-7

FORMULA

C2H5OCON=NCOOC2H5

MOLE WEIGHT

174.15

 

PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES

PHYSICAL STATE

yellow to orange liquid

MELTING POINT

 

BOILING POINT

106 C at 103 mmHg

DENSITY

1.11

SOLUBILITY IN WATER

 

pH

 

VAPOR DENSITY

 

REFRACTIVE INDEX

 

FLASH POINT

85 C

 

STABILITY AND REACTIVITY
STABILITY Stable under normal conditions. May decompose upon hearting

INCOMPATIBLE MATERIALS

Alcohols, oxidizing agents, strong bases. strong acids. heavy metals.
DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS

Carbon oxides, Nitrogen oxides. Nitrogen gas.

POLYMERIZATION Has not been reported

NFPA RATINGS

 

 

SAFETY

HAZARD NOTES

Harmful if swallowed. Harmful if inhaled. Toxic in contact with skin

EYE

May causes eye irritation.

SKIN

May causes skin irritation. Toxic in contact with skin

INGESTION

May cause irritation of the digestive tract. May be harmful if swallowed.

INHALATION

Causes respiratory tract irritation. May be harmful if inhaled.

CHRONIC

 

 

TRANSPORT & REGULATORY INFORMATION

UN NO.

2810
HAZARD CLASS

6.1

PACKING GROUP

III

HAZARD SYMBOL

T XN

RISK PHRASES

5-25-36/37/38

SAFETY PHRASES

53-36/37-45

 

OTHER INFORMATION

The Mitsunobu Reaction allows the conversion of primary and secondary alcohols to esters, phenyl ethers, thioethers and various other compounds. The nucleophile employed should be acidic, since one of the reagents (DEAD, diethylazodicarboxylate) must be protonated during the course of the reaction to prevent from side reactions. (source: http://www.organic-chemistry.org/namedreactions/mitsunobu-reaction.shtm)

The Mitsunobu reaction is a unique dehydration-condensation reaction between alcohols and various nucleophiles using the redox system comprised of diethyl azodicarboxylate (DEAD) and triphenylphosphine (TPP).The reactions proceed under mild conditions, and a wide variety of compounds can be used as nucleophiles, for example, carboxylic acids, active methylenes, imides, thiols, etc. The reaction between secondary alcohols and nucleophiles yields products with Walden inversion. The Mitsunobu reaction has been used widely in organic synthesis. Due to its utility, efforts have been made to expand application of the Mitsunobu reaction, and modified reactions have been reported. For example, by using azodicarboxamides instead of azodicarboxylates the Mitsunobu reaction is being applied to weak-acidity nucleophiles with a higher pKa value. Methods have also been reported for the easy removal of phosphine oxide, a reaction by-product, by utilizing phosphines which have an intramolecular basic component and diphenylphosphino polystyrene resin. (source: http://www.tci-asiapacific.com/product/synthetic-chem/S004.shtml)

The Mitsunobu reaction has proven to be a useful, diverse and practical method for C-O, C-N, C-C and C-X bond formation, among other uses. Its mild reaction conditions and excellent stereoselectivity make it an excellent reaction that serves its purpose well. It will no doubt continue to be an important synthetic tool for the practicing organic chemist.(source: http://www.chem.wisc.edu/areas/organic/studsemin/jantzi/jantzi-abs.pdf)

CARBOXYLATE-N=N-CARBOXYLATE Products

Products

CAS RN.

Di-tert-butyl azodicarboxylate

870-50-8

Diethyl azodicarboxylate

1972-28-7

Diisopropyl azodicarboxylate

2446-83-5
Dimethyl Azodicarboxylate2446-84-6
Diphenyl azodicarboxylate 2449-14-1
Dibenzyl azodicarboxylate 2449-05-0
Diethyl hydrazodicarboxylate 4114-28-7
1,1'-Azobis(N,N-dimethylformamide)10465-78-8

1,1'-(Azodicarbonyl)dipiperidine

10465-81-3

Bis(2,2,2-trichloroethyl)azodicarboxylate

38857-88-4

 

SALES SPECIFICATION

APPEARANCE

yellow to orange liquid
ASSAY

97.0% min

BOILING POINT

106 C at 103 mmHg

 

PACKING

 

 

PRICE