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Nitric oxide

Nitric oxide (nitrogen oxide or nitrogen monoxide[1]) is a colorless gas with the formula NO. It is one of the principal oxides of nitrogen. Nitric oxide is a free radical: it has an unpaired electron, which is sometimes denoted by a dot in its chemical formula (N=O or NO). Nitric oxide is also a heteronuclear diatomic molecule, a class of molecules whose study spawned early modern theories of chemical bonding.[6]

Nitric oxide
Skeletal formula showing two lone pairs and one three-electron bond
Space-filling model of nitric oxide
Names
IUPAC name
Nitrogen monoxide[1]
Systematic IUPAC name
Oxidonitrogen(•)[2] (additive)
Other names
Nitrogen oxide
Nitrogen(II) oxide
Oxonitrogen
Nitrogen monoxide
Identifiers
  • 10102-43-9 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
3DMet
  • B00122
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:16480 Y
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL1200689 N
ChemSpider
  • 127983 Y
DrugBank
  • DB00435 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.030.233
EC Number
  • 233-271-0
451
  • 2509
KEGG
  • D00074 Y
  • 145068
RTECS number
  • QX0525000
UNII
  • 31C4KY9ESH Y
UN number 1660
  • DTXSID1020938
  • InChI=1S/NO/c1-2 Y
    Key: MWUXSHHQAYIFBG-UHFFFAOYSA-N Y
  • InChI=1/NO/c1-2
    Key: MWUXSHHQAYIFBG-UHFFFAOYAI
  • [N]=O
Properties
NO
Molar mass 30.006 g·mol−1
Appearance Colourless gas
Density 1.3402 g/L
Melting point −164 °C (−263 °F; 109 K)
Boiling point −152 °C (−242 °F; 121 K)
0.0098 g / 100 ml (0 °C)
0.0056 g / 100 ml (20 °C)
1.0002697
Structure
linear (point group Cv)
Thermochemistry
210.76 J/(K·mol)
90.29 kJ/mol
Pharmacology
R07AX01 (WHO)
License data
  • EU EMAby INN
Inhalation
Pharmacokinetics:
good
via pulmonary capillary bed
2–6 seconds
Hazards
Occupational safety and health (OHS/OSH):
Main hazards
  • Fatal if inhaled
  • Causes severe burns
  • Causes eye damage
  • Corrosive to the respiratory tract
[4]
GHS labelling:
[3][4]
Danger
H270, H280, H314, H330[3][4]
P220, P244, P260, P280, P303+P361+P353+P315, P304+P340+P315, P305+P351+P338+P315, P370+P376, P403, P405[3][4]
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Lethal dose or concentration (LD, LC):
315 ppm (rabbit, 15 min)
854 ppm (rat, 4 h)
2500 ppm (mouse, 12 min)[5]
320 ppm (mouse)[5]
Safety data sheet (SDS)
Related compounds
Related nitrogen oxides
Dinitrogen pentoxide

Dinitrogen tetroxide
Dinitrogen trioxide
Nitrogen dioxide
Nitrous oxide
Nitroxyl (reduced form)
Hydroxylamine (hydrogenated form)

Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
N verify (what is YN ?)

An important intermediate in industrial chemistry, nitric oxide forms in combustion systems and can be generated by lightning in thunderstorms. In mammals, including humans, nitric oxide is a signaling molecule in many physiological and pathological processes.[7] It was proclaimed the "Molecule of the Year" in 1992.[8] The 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded for discovering nitric oxide's role as a cardiovascular signalling molecule.[9]

Nitric oxide should not be confused with nitrogen dioxide (NO2), a brown gas and major air pollutant, or with nitrous oxide (N2O), an anesthetic gas.[6]

Physical properties edit

Electronic configuration edit

The ground state electronic configuration of NO is, in united atom notation:[10]

 

The first two orbitals are actually pure atomic 1sO and 1sN from oxygen and nitrogen respectively and therefore are usually not noted in the united atom notation. Orbitals noted with an asterisk are antibonding. The ordering of 5σ and 1π according to their binding energies is subject to discussion. Removal of a 1π electron leads to 6 states whose energies span over a range starting at a lower level than a 5σ electron an extending to a higher level. This is due to the different orbital momentum couplings between a 1π and a 2π electron.

The lone electron in the 2π orbital makes NO a doublet (X ²Π) in its ground state whose degeneracy is split in the fine structure from spin-orbit coupling with a total momentum J=32 or J=12.

Dipole edit

The dipole of NO has been measured experimentally to 0.15740 D and is oriented from O to N (⁻NO⁺) due to the transfer of negative electronic charge from oxygen to nitrogen. [11]

Reactions edit

With di- and triatomic molecules edit

Upon condensing to a liquid, nitric oxide dimerizes to dinitrogen dioxide, but the association is weak and reversible. The N–N distance in crystalline NO is 218 pm, nearly twice the N–O distance.[6]

Since the heat of formation of NO is endothermic, NO can be decomposed to the elements. Catalytic converters in cars exploit this reaction:

2 NO → O2 + N2

When exposed to oxygen, nitric oxide converts into nitrogen dioxide:

2 NO + O2 → 2 NO2

This reaction is thought to occur via the intermediates ONOO and the red compound ONOONO.[12]

In water, nitric oxide reacts with oxygen to form nitrous acid (HNO2). The reaction is thought to proceed via the following stoichiometry:

4 NO + O2 + 2 H2O → 4 HNO2

Nitric oxide reacts with fluorine, chlorine, and bromine to form the nitrosyl halides, such as nitrosyl chloride:

2 NO + Cl2 → 2 NOCl

With NO2, also a radical, NO combines to form the intensely blue dinitrogen trioxide:[6]

NO + NO2 ⇌ ON−NO2

Organic chemistry edit

The addition of a nitric oxide moiety to another molecule is often referred to as nitrosylation. The Traube reaction[13] is the addition of a two equivalents of nitric oxide onto an enolate, giving a diazeniumdiolate (also called a nitrosohydroxylamine).[14] The product can undergo a subsequent retro-aldol reaction, giving an overall process similar to the haloform reaction. For example, nitric oxide reacts with acetone and an alkoxide to form a diazeniumdiolate on each α position, with subsequent loss of methyl acetate as a by-product:[15]

 

This reaction, which was discovered around 1898, remains of interest in nitric oxide prodrug research. Nitric oxide can also react directly with sodium methoxide, ultimately forming sodium formate and nitrous oxide by way of an N-methoxydiazeniumdiolate.[16]

Coordination complexes edit

Nitric oxide reacts with transition metals to give complexes called metal nitrosyls. The most common bonding mode of nitric oxide is the terminal linear type (M−NO).[6] Alternatively, nitric oxide can serve as a one-electron pseudohalide. In such complexes, the M−N−O group is characterized by an angle between 120° and 140°. The NO group can also bridge between metal centers through the nitrogen atom in a variety of geometries.

Production and preparation edit

In commercial settings, nitric oxide is produced by the oxidation of ammonia at 750–900 °C (normally at 850 °C) with platinum as catalyst in the Ostwald process:

4 NH3 + 5 O2 → 4 NO + 6 H2O

The uncatalyzed endothermic reaction of oxygen (O2) and nitrogen (N2), which is effected at high temperature (>2000 °C) by lightning has not been developed into a practical commercial synthesis (see Birkeland–Eyde process):

N2 + O2 → 2 NO

Laboratory methods edit

In the laboratory, nitric oxide is conveniently generated by reduction of dilute nitric acid with copper:

8 HNO3 + 3 Cu → 3 Cu(NO3)2 + 4 H2O + 2 NO

An alternative route involves the reduction of nitrous acid in the form of sodium nitrite or potassium nitrite:

2 NaNO2 + 2 NaI + 2 H2SO4 → I2 + 2 Na2SO4 + 2 H2O + 2 NO
2 NaNO2 + 2 FeSO4 + 3 H2SO4 → Fe2(SO4)3 + 2 NaHSO4 + 2 H2O + 2 NO
3 KNO2 + KNO3 + Cr2O3 → 2 K2CrO4 + 4 NO

The iron(II) sulfate route is simple and has been used in undergraduate laboratory experiments. So-called NONOate compounds are also used for nitric oxide generation.

Detection and assay edit

 
Nitric oxide (white) in conifer cells, visualized using DAF-2 DA (diaminofluorescein diacetate)

Nitric oxide concentration can be determined using a chemiluminescent reaction involving ozone.[17] A sample containing nitric oxide is mixed with a large quantity of ozone. The nitric oxide reacts with the ozone to produce oxygen and nitrogen dioxide, accompanied with emission of light (chemiluminescence):

NO + O3 → NO2 + O2 +

which can be measured with a photodetector. The amount of light produced is proportional to the amount of nitric oxide in the sample.

Other methods of testing include electroanalysis (amperometric approach), where ·NO reacts with an electrode to induce a current or voltage change. The detection of NO radicals in biological tissues is particularly difficult due to the short lifetime and concentration of these radicals in tissues. One of the few practical methods is spin trapping of nitric oxide with iron-dithiocarbamate complexes and subsequent detection of the mono-nitrosyl-iron complex with electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR).[18][19]

A group of fluorescent dye indicators that are also available in acetylated form for intracellular measurements exist. The most common compound is 4,5-diaminofluorescein (DAF-2).[20]

Environmental effects edit

Acid rain deposition edit

Nitric oxide reacts with the hydroperoxyl radical (HO
2
) to form nitrogen dioxide (NO2), which then can react with a hydroxyl radical (OH) to produce nitric acid (HNO3):

NO + HO
2
NO2 + OH
NO2 + OH → HNO3

Nitric acid, along with sulfuric acid, contributes to acid rain deposition.

Ozone depletion edit

NO participates in ozone layer depletion. Nitric oxide reacts with stratospheric ozone to form O2 and nitrogen dioxide:

NO + O3 → NO2 + O2

This reaction is also utilized to measure concentrations of NO in control volumes.

Precursor to NO2 edit

As seen in the acid deposition section, nitric oxide can transform into nitrogen dioxide (this can happen with the hydroperoxy radical, HO
2
, or diatomic oxygen, O2). Symptoms of short-term nitrogen dioxide exposure include nausea, dyspnea and headache. Long-term effects could include impaired immune and respiratory function.[21]

Biological functions edit

NO is a gaseous signaling molecule.[22] It is a key vertebrate biological messenger, playing a role in a variety of biological processes.[23] It is a bioproduct in almost all types of organisms, including bacteria, plants, fungi, and animal cells.[24]

Nitric oxide, an endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), is biosynthesized endogenously from L-arginine, oxygen, and NADPH by various nitric oxide synthase (NOS) enzymes.[25] Reduction of inorganic nitrate may also make nitric oxide.[26] One of the main enzymatic targets of nitric oxide is guanylyl cyclase.[27] The binding of nitric oxide to the heme region of the enzyme leads to activation, in the presence of iron.[27] Nitric oxide is highly reactive (having a lifetime of a few seconds), yet diffuses freely across membranes. These attributes make nitric oxide ideal for a transient paracrine (between adjacent cells) and autocrine (within a single cell) signaling molecule.[26] Once nitric oxide is converted to nitrates and nitrites by oxygen and water, cell signaling is deactivated.[27]

The endothelium (inner lining) of blood vessels uses nitric oxide to signal the surrounding smooth muscle to relax, resulting in vasodilation and increasing blood flow.[26] Sildenafil (Viagra) is a drug that uses the nitric oxide pathway. Sildenafil does not produce nitric oxide, but enhances the signals that are downstream of the nitric oxide pathway by protecting cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) from degradation by cGMP-specific phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5) in the corpus cavernosum, allowing for the signal to be enhanced, and thus vasodilation.[25] Another endogenous gaseous transmitter, hydrogen sulfide (H2S) works with NO to induce vasodilation and angiogenesis in a cooperative manner.[28][29]

Nasal breathing produces nitric oxide within the body, while oral breathing does not.[30][31]

Occupational safety and health edit

In the U.S., the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has set the legal limit (permissible exposure limit) for nitric oxide exposure in the workplace as 25 ppm (30 mg/m3) over an 8-hour workday. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has set a recommended exposure limit (REL) of 25 ppm (30 mg/m3) over an 8-hour workday. At levels of 100 ppm, nitric oxide is immediately dangerous to life and health.[32]

Explosion hazard edit

Liquid nitrogen oxide is very sensitive to detonation even in the absence of fuel, and can be initiated as readily as nitroglycerin. Detonation of the endothermic liquid oxide close to its b.p. (-152°C) generated a 100 kbar pulse and fragmented the test equipment. It is the simplest molecule that is capable of detonation in all three phases. The liquid oxide is sensitive and may explode during distillation, and this has been the cause of industrial accidents.[33] Gaseous nitric oxide detonates at about 2300 m/s, but as a solid it can reach a detonation velocity of 6100 m/s.[34]

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry, IUPAC Recommendations (PDF). International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. 2005. p. 69.
  2. ^ "Nitric Oxide (CHEBI:16480)". Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI). UK: European Bioinformatics Institute.
  3. ^ a b c "Nitrogen monoxide - Registration Dossier - ECHA". Retrieved 2020-11-02.
  4. ^ a b c d "Safety Data Sheet - Nitric Oxide, compressed - Registration Dossier" (PDF). Retrieved 2020-11-02.
  5. ^ a b "Nitric oxide". Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations (IDLH). National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
  6. ^ a b c d e Greenwood, Norman N.; Earnshaw, Alan (1997). Chemistry of the Elements (2nd ed.). Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 978-0-08-037941-8.
  7. ^ Hou, Y. C.; Janczuk, A.; Wang, P. G. (1999). "Current trends in the development of nitric oxide donors". Current Pharmaceutical Design. 5 (6): 417–441. doi:10.2174/138161280506230110111042. PMID 10390607.
  8. ^ Culotta, Elizabeth; Koshland, Daniel E. Jr. (1992). "NO news is good news". Science. 258 (5090): 1862–1864. Bibcode:1992Sci...258.1862C. doi:10.1126/science.1361684. PMID 1361684.
  9. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1998". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  10. ^ Berkowitz, Joseph (1979). Photoabsorption, Photoionization, and Photoelectron Spectroscopy. Academic Press. p. 231. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-091650-4.50012-8.
  11. ^ Hoy, A. R.; Johns, J. W. C.; McKellar, A. R. W. (1975). "Stark Spectroscopy with the CO Laser: Dipole Moments, Hyperfine Structure, and Level Crossing Effects in the Fundamental Band of NO". Canadian Journal of Physics. 53 (19): 2029–2039. Bibcode:1975CaJPh..53.2029H. doi:10.1139/p75-254.
  12. ^ Galliker, Benedikt; et al. (2009). "Intermediates in the Autoxidation of Nitrogen Monoxide". Chemistry - A European Journal. 15 (25): 6161–6168. doi:10.1002/chem.200801819. ISSN 0947-6539. PMID 19437472.
  13. ^
  14. ^ Arulsamy, Navamoney; Bohle, D. Scott (2006). "Synthesis of Diazeniumdiolates from the Reactions of Nitric Oxide with Enolates". J. Org. Chem. 71 (2): 572–581. doi:10.1021/jo051998p. PMID 16408967.
  15. ^ Traube, Wilhelm (1898). "Ueber Synthesen stickstoffhaltiger Verbindungen mit Hülfe des Stickoxyds". Justus Liebig's Annalen der Chemie (in German). 300 (1): 81–128. doi:10.1002/jlac.18983000108.
  16. ^ Derosa, Frank; Keefer, Larry K.; Hrabie, Joseph A. (2008). "Nitric Oxide Reacts with Methoxide". The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 73 (3): 1139–1142. doi:10.1021/jo7020423. PMID 18184006.
  17. ^ Fontijn, Arthur; Sabadell, Alberto J.; Ronco, Richard J. (1970). "Homogeneous chemiluminescent measurement of nitric oxide with ozone. Implications for continuous selective monitoring of gaseous air pollutants". Analytical Chemistry. 42 (6): 575–579. doi:10.1021/ac60288a034.
  18. ^ Vanin, A; Huisman, A; Van Faassen, E (2002). "Iron dithiocarbamate as spin trap for nitric oxide detection: Pitfalls and successes". Nitric Oxide, Part D: Oxide Detection, Mitochondria and Cell Functions, and Peroxynitrite Reactions. Methods in Enzymology. Vol. 359. pp. 27–42. doi:10.1016/S0076-6879(02)59169-2. ISBN 9780121822620. PMID 12481557.
  19. ^ Nagano, T; Yoshimura, T (2002). "Bioimaging of nitric oxide". Chemical Reviews. 102 (4): 1235–1270. doi:10.1021/cr010152s. PMID 11942795.
  20. ^ Kojima H, Nakatsubo N, Kikuchi K, Kawahara S, Kirino Y, Nagoshi H, Hirata Y, Nagano T (1998). "Detection and imaging of nitric oxide with novel fluorescent indicators: diaminofluoresceins". Anal. Chem. 70 (13): 2446–2453. doi:10.1021/ac9801723. PMID 9666719.
  21. ^ "Centers for Disease Control and Prevention". NIOSH. 1 July 2014. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  22. ^ Liu, Hongying; Weng, Lingyan; Yang, Chi (2017-03-28). "A review on nanomaterial-based electrochemical sensors for H2O2, H2S and NO inside cells or released by cells". Microchimica Acta. 184 (5): 1267–1283. doi:10.1007/s00604-017-2179-2. ISSN 0026-3672. S2CID 21308802.
  23. ^ Weller, Richard, Could the sun be good for your heart? 2014-02-16 at the Wayback Machine TedxGlasgow. Filmed March 2012, posted January 2013
  24. ^ Roszer, T (2012) The Biology of Subcellular Nitric Oxide. ISBN 978-94-007-2818-9
  25. ^ a b Perez, Krystle M.; Laughon, Matthew (November 2015). "Sildenafil in Term and Premature Infants: A Systematic Review". Clinical Therapeutics. 37 (11): 2598–2607.e1. doi:10.1016/j.clinthera.2015.07.019. ISSN 0149-2918. PMID 26490498.
  26. ^ a b c Stryer, Lubert (1995). Biochemistry (4th ed.). W.H. Freeman and Company. p. 732. ISBN 978-0-7167-2009-6.
  27. ^ a b c T., Hancock, John (2010). Cell signalling (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199232109. OCLC 444336556.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  28. ^ Szabo, Csaba; Coletta, Ciro; Chao, Celia; Módis, Katalin; Szczesny, Bartosz; Papapetropoulos, Andreas; Hellmich, Mark R. (2013-07-23). "Tumor-derived hydrogen sulfide, produced by cystathionine-β-synthase, stimulates bioenergetics, cell proliferation, and angiogenesis in colon cancer". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 110 (30): 12474–12479. Bibcode:2013PNAS..11012474S. doi:10.1073/pnas.1306241110. ISSN 1091-6490. PMC 3725060. PMID 23836652.
  29. ^ Altaany, Zaid; Yang, Guangdong; Wang, Rui (July 2013). "Crosstalk between hydrogen sulfide and nitric oxide in endothelial cells". Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine. 17 (7): 879–888. doi:10.1111/jcmm.12077. ISSN 1582-4934. PMC 3822893. PMID 23742697.
  30. ^ Yasuda, Yoshifumi; Itoh, Tomonori; Miyamura, Miharu; Nishino, Hitoo (1997). "Comparison of Exhaled Nitric Oxide and Cardiorespiratory Indices between Nasal and Oral Breathing during Submaximal Exercise in Humans". Japanese Journal of Physiology. 47 (5): 465–470. doi:10.2170/jjphysiol.47.465. ISSN 0021-521X. PMID 9504133. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
  31. ^ Dahl, Melissa (2011-01-11). "'Mouth-breathing' gross, harmful to your health". NBC News. Retrieved 2021-09-06.
  32. ^ "Nitric oxide". National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
  33. ^ Urben, Peter (22 May 2017). Bretherick's Handbook of Reactive Chemical Hazards | ScienceDirect. Elsevier Science. ISBN 9780081009710. Retrieved 2022-02-23.
  34. ^ Ribovich, John; Murphy, John; Watson, Richard (1975-01-01). "Detonation studies with nitric oxide, nitrous oxide, nitrogen tetroxide, carbon monoxide, and ethylene". Journal of Hazardous Materials. 1 (4): 275–287. doi:10.1016/0304-3894(75)80001-X. ISSN 0304-3894.

Further reading

  • Butler A. and Nicholson R.; "Life, death and NO." Cambridge 2003. ISBN 978-0-85404-686-7.
  • van Faassen, E. E.; Vanin, A. F. (eds); "Radicals for life: The various forms of Nitric Oxide." Elsevier, Amsterdam 2007. ISBN 978-0-444-52236-8.
  • Ignarro, L. J. (ed.); "Nitric oxide:biology and pathobiology." Academic Press, San Diego 2000. ISBN 0-12-370420-0.

External links edit

  • International Chemical Safety Card 1311
  • "Nitric oxide and its role in health and diabetes". 21 October 2015.
  • Microscale Gas Chemistry: Experiments with Nitrogen Oxides
  • Your Brain Boots Up Like a Computer – new insights about the biological role of nitric oxide.
  • Assessing The Potential of Nitric Oxide in the Diabetic Foot
  • New Discoveries About Nitric Oxide Can Provide Drugs For Schizophrenia
  • "Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations (IDLH): Nitric oxide". National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. 2 November 2018.

nitric, oxide, confused, with, nitrous, oxide, this, article, about, molecule, nitrogen, atom, oxygen, atom, other, chemical, combinations, nitrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, oxide, nitric, oxide, medication, biology, biological, functions, nitric, oxide, nitrogen, o. Not to be confused with nitrous oxide This article is about a molecule of one nitrogen atom and one oxygen atom For other chemical combinations of nitrogen and oxygen see nitrogen oxide For the use of nitric oxide as a medication or in biology see Biological functions of nitric oxide Nitric oxide nitrogen oxide or nitrogen monoxide 1 is a colorless gas with the formula NO It is one of the principal oxides of nitrogen Nitric oxide is a free radical it has an unpaired electron which is sometimes denoted by a dot in its chemical formula N O or NO Nitric oxide is also a heteronuclear diatomic molecule a class of molecules whose study spawned early modern theories of chemical bonding 6 Nitric oxide Skeletal formula showing two lone pairs and one three electron bond Space filling model of nitric oxideNamesIUPAC name Nitrogen monoxide 1 Systematic IUPAC name Oxidonitrogen 2 additive Other names Nitrogen oxideNitrogen II oxideOxonitrogenNitrogen monoxideIdentifiersCAS Number 10102 43 9 Y3D model JSmol Interactive image3DMet B00122ChEBI CHEBI 16480 YChEMBL ChEMBL1200689 NChemSpider 127983 YDrugBank DB00435 YECHA InfoCard 100 030 233EC Number 233 271 0Gmelin Reference 451IUPHAR BPS 2509KEGG D00074 YPubChem CID 145068RTECS number QX0525000UNII 31C4KY9ESH YUN number 1660CompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID1020938InChI InChI 1S NO c1 2 YKey MWUXSHHQAYIFBG UHFFFAOYSA N YInChI 1 NO c1 2Key MWUXSHHQAYIFBG UHFFFAOYAISMILES N OPropertiesChemical formula N OMolar mass 30 006 g mol 1Appearance Colourless gasDensity 1 3402 g LMelting point 164 C 263 F 109 K Boiling point 152 C 242 F 121 K Solubility in water 0 0098 g 100 ml 0 C 0 0056 g 100 ml 20 C Refractive index nD 1 0002697StructureMolecular shape linear point group C v ThermochemistryStd molarentropy S 298 210 76 J K mol Std enthalpy offormation DfH 298 90 29 kJ molPharmacologyATC code R07AX01 WHO License data EU EMA by INNRoutes ofadministration InhalationPharmacokinetics Bioavailability goodMetabolism via pulmonary capillary bedBiological half life 2 6 secondsHazardsOccupational safety and health OHS OSH Main hazards Fatal if inhaledCauses severe burnsCauses eye damageCorrosive to the respiratory tract 4 GHS labelling Pictograms 3 4 Signal word DangerHazard statements H270 H280 H314 H330 3 4 Precautionary statements P220 P244 P260 P280 P303 P361 P353 P315 P304 P340 P315 P305 P351 P338 P315 P370 P376 P403 P405 3 4 NFPA 704 fire diamond 303OXLethal dose or concentration LD LC LC50 median concentration 315 ppm rabbit 15 min 854 ppm rat 4 h 2500 ppm mouse 12 min 5 LCLo lowest published 320 ppm mouse 5 Safety data sheet SDS External SDSRelated compoundsRelated nitrogen oxides Dinitrogen pentoxideDinitrogen tetroxideDinitrogen trioxideNitrogen dioxideNitrous oxideNitroxyl reduced form Hydroxylamine hydrogenated form Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa N verify what is Y N Infobox references An important intermediate in industrial chemistry nitric oxide forms in combustion systems and can be generated by lightning in thunderstorms In mammals including humans nitric oxide is a signaling molecule in many physiological and pathological processes 7 It was proclaimed the Molecule of the Year in 1992 8 The 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded for discovering nitric oxide s role as a cardiovascular signalling molecule 9 Nitric oxide should not be confused with nitrogen dioxide NO2 a brown gas and major air pollutant or with nitrous oxide N2O an anesthetic gas 6 Contents 1 Physical properties 1 1 Electronic configuration 1 2 Dipole 2 Reactions 2 1 With di and triatomic molecules 2 2 Organic chemistry 2 3 Coordination complexes 3 Production and preparation 3 1 Laboratory methods 4 Detection and assay 5 Environmental effects 5 1 Acid rain deposition 5 2 Ozone depletion 5 3 Precursor to NO2 6 Biological functions 7 Occupational safety and health 8 Explosion hazard 9 References 10 External linksPhysical properties editElectronic configuration edit The ground state electronic configuration of NO is in united atom notation 10 1 s 2 2 s 2 3 s 2 4 s 2 5 s 2 1 p 4 2 p 1 displaystyle 1 sigma 2 2 sigma 2 3 sigma 2 4 sigma 2 5 sigma 2 1 pi 4 2 pi 1 nbsp The first two orbitals are actually pure atomic 1sO and 1sN from oxygen and nitrogen respectively and therefore are usually not noted in the united atom notation Orbitals noted with an asterisk are antibonding The ordering of 5s and 1p according to their binding energies is subject to discussion Removal of a 1p electron leads to 6 states whose energies span over a range starting at a lower level than a 5s electron an extending to a higher level This is due to the different orbital momentum couplings between a 1p and a 2p electron The lone electron in the 2p orbital makes NO a doublet X P in its ground state whose degeneracy is split in the fine structure from spin orbit coupling with a total momentum J 3 2 or J 1 2 Dipole edit The dipole of NO has been measured experimentally to 0 15740 D and is oriented from O to N NO due to the transfer of negative electronic charge from oxygen to nitrogen 11 Reactions editWith di and triatomic molecules edit Upon condensing to a liquid nitric oxide dimerizes to dinitrogen dioxide but the association is weak and reversible The N N distance in crystalline NO is 218 pm nearly twice the N O distance 6 Since the heat of formation of NO is endothermic NO can be decomposed to the elements Catalytic converters in cars exploit this reaction 2 NO O2 N2When exposed to oxygen nitric oxide converts into nitrogen dioxide 2 NO O2 2 NO2This reaction is thought to occur via the intermediates ONOO and the red compound ONOONO 12 In water nitric oxide reacts with oxygen to form nitrous acid HNO2 The reaction is thought to proceed via the following stoichiometry 4 NO O2 2 H2O 4 HNO2Nitric oxide reacts with fluorine chlorine and bromine to form the nitrosyl halides such as nitrosyl chloride 2 NO Cl2 2 NOClWith NO2 also a radical NO combines to form the intensely blue dinitrogen trioxide 6 NO NO2 ON NO2Organic chemistry edit The addition of a nitric oxide moiety to another molecule is often referred to as nitrosylation The Traube reaction 13 is the addition of a two equivalents of nitric oxide onto an enolate giving a diazeniumdiolate also called a nitrosohydroxylamine 14 The product can undergo a subsequent retro aldol reaction giving an overall process similar to the haloform reaction For example nitric oxide reacts with acetone and an alkoxide to form a diazeniumdiolate on each a position with subsequent loss of methyl acetate as a by product 15 nbsp This reaction which was discovered around 1898 remains of interest in nitric oxide prodrug research Nitric oxide can also react directly with sodium methoxide ultimately forming sodium formate and nitrous oxide by way of an N methoxydiazeniumdiolate 16 Coordination complexes edit Main article Metal nitrosyl Nitric oxide reacts with transition metals to give complexes called metal nitrosyls The most common bonding mode of nitric oxide is the terminal linear type M NO 6 Alternatively nitric oxide can serve as a one electron pseudohalide In such complexes the M N O group is characterized by an angle between 120 and 140 The NO group can also bridge between metal centers through the nitrogen atom in a variety of geometries Production and preparation editIn commercial settings nitric oxide is produced by the oxidation of ammonia at 750 900 C normally at 850 C with platinum as catalyst in the Ostwald process 4 NH3 5 O2 4 NO 6 H2OThe uncatalyzed endothermic reaction of oxygen O2 and nitrogen N2 which is effected at high temperature gt 2000 C by lightning has not been developed into a practical commercial synthesis see Birkeland Eyde process N2 O2 2 NOLaboratory methods edit In the laboratory nitric oxide is conveniently generated by reduction of dilute nitric acid with copper 8 HNO3 3 Cu 3 Cu NO3 2 4 H2O 2 NOAn alternative route involves the reduction of nitrous acid in the form of sodium nitrite or potassium nitrite 2 NaNO2 2 NaI 2 H2SO4 I2 2 Na2SO4 2 H2O 2 NO 2 NaNO2 2 FeSO4 3 H2SO4 Fe2 SO4 3 2 NaHSO4 2 H2O 2 NO 3 KNO2 KNO3 Cr2O3 2 K2CrO4 4 NOThe iron II sulfate route is simple and has been used in undergraduate laboratory experiments So called NONOate compounds are also used for nitric oxide generation Detection and assay edit nbsp Nitric oxide white in conifer cells visualized using DAF 2 DA diaminofluorescein diacetate Nitric oxide concentration can be determined using a chemiluminescent reaction involving ozone 17 A sample containing nitric oxide is mixed with a large quantity of ozone The nitric oxide reacts with the ozone to produce oxygen and nitrogen dioxide accompanied with emission of light chemiluminescence NO O3 NO2 O2 hnwhich can be measured with a photodetector The amount of light produced is proportional to the amount of nitric oxide in the sample Other methods of testing include electroanalysis amperometric approach where NO reacts with an electrode to induce a current or voltage change The detection of NO radicals in biological tissues is particularly difficult due to the short lifetime and concentration of these radicals in tissues One of the few practical methods is spin trapping of nitric oxide with iron dithiocarbamate complexes and subsequent detection of the mono nitrosyl iron complex with electron paramagnetic resonance EPR 18 19 A group of fluorescent dye indicators that are also available in acetylated form for intracellular measurements exist The most common compound is 4 5 diaminofluorescein DAF 2 20 Environmental effects editMain article NOx Acid rain deposition edit Nitric oxide reacts with the hydroperoxyl radical HO 2 to form nitrogen dioxide NO2 which then can react with a hydroxyl radical OH to produce nitric acid HNO3 NO HO 2 NO2 OH NO2 OH HNO3Nitric acid along with sulfuric acid contributes to acid rain deposition Ozone depletion edit NO participates in ozone layer depletion Nitric oxide reacts with stratospheric ozone to form O2 and nitrogen dioxide NO O3 NO2 O2This reaction is also utilized to measure concentrations of NO in control volumes Precursor to NO2 edit As seen in the acid deposition section nitric oxide can transform into nitrogen dioxide this can happen with the hydroperoxy radical HO 2 or diatomic oxygen O2 Symptoms of short term nitrogen dioxide exposure include nausea dyspnea and headache Long term effects could include impaired immune and respiratory function 21 Biological functions editMain article Biological functions of nitric oxide NO is a gaseous signaling molecule 22 It is a key vertebrate biological messenger playing a role in a variety of biological processes 23 It is a bioproduct in almost all types of organisms including bacteria plants fungi and animal cells 24 Nitric oxide an endothelium derived relaxing factor EDRF is biosynthesized endogenously from L arginine oxygen and NADPH by various nitric oxide synthase NOS enzymes 25 Reduction of inorganic nitrate may also make nitric oxide 26 One of the main enzymatic targets of nitric oxide is guanylyl cyclase 27 The binding of nitric oxide to the heme region of the enzyme leads to activation in the presence of iron 27 Nitric oxide is highly reactive having a lifetime of a few seconds yet diffuses freely across membranes These attributes make nitric oxide ideal for a transient paracrine between adjacent cells and autocrine within a single cell signaling molecule 26 Once nitric oxide is converted to nitrates and nitrites by oxygen and water cell signaling is deactivated 27 The endothelium inner lining of blood vessels uses nitric oxide to signal the surrounding smooth muscle to relax resulting in vasodilation and increasing blood flow 26 Sildenafil Viagra is a drug that uses the nitric oxide pathway Sildenafil does not produce nitric oxide but enhances the signals that are downstream of the nitric oxide pathway by protecting cyclic guanosine monophosphate cGMP from degradation by cGMP specific phosphodiesterase type 5 PDE5 in the corpus cavernosum allowing for the signal to be enhanced and thus vasodilation 25 Another endogenous gaseous transmitter hydrogen sulfide H2S works with NO to induce vasodilation and angiogenesis in a cooperative manner 28 29 Nasal breathing produces nitric oxide within the body while oral breathing does not 30 31 Occupational safety and health editIn the U S the Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA has set the legal limit permissible exposure limit for nitric oxide exposure in the workplace as 25 ppm 30 mg m3 over an 8 hour workday The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH has set a recommended exposure limit REL of 25 ppm 30 mg m3 over an 8 hour workday At levels of 100 ppm nitric oxide is immediately dangerous to life and health 32 Explosion hazard editLiquid nitrogen oxide is very sensitive to detonation even in the absence of fuel and can be initiated as readily as nitroglycerin Detonation of the endothermic liquid oxide close to its b p 152 C generated a 100 kbar pulse and fragmented the test equipment It is the simplest molecule that is capable of detonation in all three phases The liquid oxide is sensitive and may explode during distillation and this has been the cause of industrial accidents 33 Gaseous nitric oxide detonates at about 2300 m s but as a solid it can reach a detonation velocity of 6100 m s 34 References editNotes a b Nomenclature of Inorganic Chemistry IUPAC Recommendations PDF International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry 2005 p 69 Nitric Oxide CHEBI 16480 Chemical Entities of Biological Interest ChEBI UK European Bioinformatics Institute a b c Nitrogen monoxide Registration Dossier ECHA Retrieved 2020 11 02 a b c d Safety Data Sheet Nitric Oxide compressed Registration Dossier PDF Retrieved 2020 11 02 a b Nitric oxide Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations IDLH National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH a b c d e Greenwood Norman N Earnshaw Alan 1997 Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 0 08 037941 8 Hou Y C Janczuk A Wang P G 1999 Current trends in the development of nitric oxide donors Current Pharmaceutical Design 5 6 417 441 doi 10 2174 138161280506230110111042 PMID 10390607 Culotta Elizabeth Koshland Daniel E Jr 1992 NO news is good news Science 258 5090 1862 1864 Bibcode 1992Sci 258 1862C doi 10 1126 science 1361684 PMID 1361684 The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1998 NobelPrize org Retrieved 2022 06 17 Berkowitz Joseph 1979 Photoabsorption Photoionization and Photoelectron Spectroscopy Academic Press p 231 doi 10 1016 B978 0 12 091650 4 50012 8 Hoy A R Johns J W C McKellar A R W 1975 Stark Spectroscopy with the CO Laser Dipole Moments Hyperfine Structure and Level Crossing Effects in the Fundamental Band of NO Canadian Journal of Physics 53 19 2029 2039 Bibcode 1975CaJPh 53 2029H doi 10 1139 p75 254 Galliker Benedikt et al 2009 Intermediates in the Autoxidation of Nitrogen Monoxide Chemistry A European Journal 15 25 6161 6168 doi 10 1002 chem 200801819 ISSN 0947 6539 PMID 19437472 Not to be confused with Traube purine synthesis Arulsamy Navamoney Bohle D Scott 2006 Synthesis of Diazeniumdiolates from the Reactions of Nitric Oxide with Enolates J Org Chem 71 2 572 581 doi 10 1021 jo051998p PMID 16408967 Traube Wilhelm 1898 Ueber Synthesen stickstoffhaltiger Verbindungen mit Hulfe des Stickoxyds Justus Liebig s Annalen der Chemie in German 300 1 81 128 doi 10 1002 jlac 18983000108 Derosa Frank Keefer Larry K Hrabie Joseph A 2008 Nitric Oxide Reacts with Methoxide The Journal of Organic Chemistry 73 3 1139 1142 doi 10 1021 jo7020423 PMID 18184006 Fontijn Arthur Sabadell Alberto J Ronco Richard J 1970 Homogeneous chemiluminescent measurement of nitric oxide with ozone Implications for continuous selective monitoring of gaseous air pollutants Analytical Chemistry 42 6 575 579 doi 10 1021 ac60288a034 Vanin A Huisman A Van Faassen E 2002 Iron dithiocarbamate as spin trap for nitric oxide detection Pitfalls and successes Nitric Oxide Part D Oxide Detection Mitochondria and Cell Functions and Peroxynitrite Reactions Methods in Enzymology Vol 359 pp 27 42 doi 10 1016 S0076 6879 02 59169 2 ISBN 9780121822620 PMID 12481557 Nagano T Yoshimura T 2002 Bioimaging of nitric oxide Chemical Reviews 102 4 1235 1270 doi 10 1021 cr010152s PMID 11942795 Kojima H Nakatsubo N Kikuchi K Kawahara S Kirino Y Nagoshi H Hirata Y Nagano T 1998 Detection and imaging of nitric oxide with novel fluorescent indicators diaminofluoresceins Anal Chem 70 13 2446 2453 doi 10 1021 ac9801723 PMID 9666719 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention NIOSH 1 July 2014 Retrieved 10 December 2015 Liu Hongying Weng Lingyan Yang Chi 2017 03 28 A review on nanomaterial based electrochemical sensors for H2O2 H2S and NO inside cells or released by cells Microchimica Acta 184 5 1267 1283 doi 10 1007 s00604 017 2179 2 ISSN 0026 3672 S2CID 21308802 Weller Richard Could the sun be good for your heart Archived 2014 02 16 at the Wayback Machine TedxGlasgow Filmed March 2012 posted January 2013 Roszer T 2012 The Biology of Subcellular Nitric Oxide ISBN 978 94 007 2818 9 a b Perez Krystle M Laughon Matthew November 2015 Sildenafil in Term and Premature Infants A Systematic Review Clinical Therapeutics 37 11 2598 2607 e1 doi 10 1016 j clinthera 2015 07 019 ISSN 0149 2918 PMID 26490498 a b c Stryer Lubert 1995 Biochemistry 4th ed W H Freeman and Company p 732 ISBN 978 0 7167 2009 6 a b c T Hancock John 2010 Cell signalling 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199232109 OCLC 444336556 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Szabo Csaba Coletta Ciro Chao Celia Modis Katalin Szczesny Bartosz Papapetropoulos Andreas Hellmich Mark R 2013 07 23 Tumor derived hydrogen sulfide produced by cystathionine b synthase stimulates bioenergetics cell proliferation and angiogenesis in colon cancer Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 110 30 12474 12479 Bibcode 2013PNAS 11012474S doi 10 1073 pnas 1306241110 ISSN 1091 6490 PMC 3725060 PMID 23836652 Altaany Zaid Yang Guangdong Wang Rui July 2013 Crosstalk between hydrogen sulfide and nitric oxide in endothelial cells Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine 17 7 879 888 doi 10 1111 jcmm 12077 ISSN 1582 4934 PMC 3822893 PMID 23742697 Yasuda Yoshifumi Itoh Tomonori Miyamura Miharu Nishino Hitoo 1997 Comparison of Exhaled Nitric Oxide and Cardiorespiratory Indices between Nasal and Oral Breathing during Submaximal Exercise in Humans Japanese Journal of Physiology 47 5 465 470 doi 10 2170 jjphysiol 47 465 ISSN 0021 521X PMID 9504133 Retrieved 2022 11 17 Dahl Melissa 2011 01 11 Mouth breathing gross harmful to your health NBC News Retrieved 2021 09 06 Nitric oxide National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Retrieved 2015 11 20 Urben Peter 22 May 2017 Bretherick s Handbook of Reactive Chemical Hazards ScienceDirect Elsevier Science ISBN 9780081009710 Retrieved 2022 02 23 Ribovich John Murphy John Watson Richard 1975 01 01 Detonation studies with nitric oxide nitrous oxide nitrogen tetroxide carbon monoxide and ethylene Journal of Hazardous Materials 1 4 275 287 doi 10 1016 0304 3894 75 80001 X ISSN 0304 3894 Further reading Butler A and Nicholson R Life death and NO Cambridge 2003 ISBN 978 0 85404 686 7 van Faassen E E Vanin A F eds Radicals for life The various forms of Nitric Oxide Elsevier Amsterdam 2007 ISBN 978 0 444 52236 8 Ignarro L J ed Nitric oxide biology and pathobiology Academic Press San Diego 2000 ISBN 0 12 370420 0 External links editInternational Chemical Safety Card 1311 Nitric oxide and its role in health and diabetes 21 October 2015 Microscale Gas Chemistry Experiments with Nitrogen Oxides Your Brain Boots Up Like a Computer new insights about the biological role of nitric oxide Assessing The Potential of Nitric Oxide in the Diabetic Foot New Discoveries About Nitric Oxide Can Provide Drugs For Schizophrenia Nitric Oxide at the Chemical Database Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations IDLH Nitric oxide National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health 2 November 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nitric oxide amp oldid 1198331831, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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