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Picric acid

Picric acid is an organic compound with the formula (O2N)3C6H2OH. Its IUPAC name is 2,4,6-trinitrophenol (TNP). The name "picric" comes from Greek: πικρός (pikros), meaning "bitter", due to its bitter taste. It is one of the most acidic phenols. Like other strongly nitrated organic compounds, picric acid is an explosive, which is its primary use. It has also been used as medicine (antiseptic, burn treatments) and as a dye.

Picric acid
Names
Preferred IUPAC name
2,4,6-Trinitrophenol[1]
Systematic IUPAC name
2,4,6-Trinitrobenzenol
Other names
Picric acid[1]
Carbazotic acid
Phenol trinitrate
Picronitric acid
Trinitrophenol
2,4,6-Trinitro-1-phenol
2-Hydroxy-1,3,5-trinitrobenzene
TNP
Melinite
Lyddite
Identifiers
  • 88-89-1 Y
3D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:46149 Y
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL108541 Y
ChemSpider
  • 6688 Y
DrugBank
  • DB03651 Y
ECHA InfoCard 100.001.696
  • 6954
RTECS number
  • TJ7875000
UNII
  • A49OS0F91S Y
UN number UN1344
  • DTXSID4025909
  • InChI=1S/C6H3N3O7/c10-6-4(8(13)14)1-3(7(11)12)2-5(6)9(15)16/h1-2,10H Y
    Key: OXNIZHLAWKMVMX-UHFFFAOYSA-N Y
  • InChI=1/C6H3N3O7/c10-6-4(8(13)14)1-3(7(11)12)2-5(6)9(15)16/h1-2,10H
    Key: OXNIZHLAWKMVMX-UHFFFAOYAM
  • O=[N+]([O-])c1cc(cc([N+]([O-])=O)c1O)[N+]([O-])=O
Properties
C6H3N3O7
Molar mass 229.10 g·mol−1
Appearance Colorless to yellow solid
Density 1.763 g·cm−3, solid
Melting point 122.5 °C (252.5 °F; 395.6 K)
Boiling point > 300 °C (572 °F; 573 K) Detonates
12.7 g·L−1
Vapor pressure 1 mmHg (195 °C)[2]
Acidity (pKa) 0.38
-84.34·10−6 cm3/mol
Hazards
Occupational safety and health (OHS/OSH):
Main hazards
explosive
GHS labelling:
H206, H302, H311, H331
P210, P212, P230, P233, P280, P370+P380+P375, P501
NFPA 704 (fire diamond)
Health 3: Short exposure could cause serious temporary or residual injury. E.g. chlorine gasFlammability 4: Will rapidly or completely vaporize at normal atmospheric pressure and temperature, or is readily dispersed in air and will burn readily. Flash point below 23 °C (73 °F). E.g. propaneInstability 4: Readily capable of detonation or explosive decomposition at normal temperatures and pressures. E.g. nitroglycerinSpecial hazards (white): no code
3
4
4
Flash point 150 °C; 302 °F; 423 K[2]
Lethal dose or concentration (LD, LC):
100 mg/kg (guinea pig, oral)
250 mg/kg (cat, oral)
120 mg/kg (rabbit, oral)[3]
NIOSH (US health exposure limits):
PEL (Permissible)
TWA 0.1 mg/m3 [skin]
REL (Recommended)
TWA 0.1 mg/m3 ST 0.3 mg/m3 [skin][2]
IDLH (Immediate danger)
75 mg/m3[2]
Explosive data
Detonation velocity 7,350 m·s−1 at ρ 1.70
RE factor 1.20
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
Y verify (what is YN ?)

History edit

Picric acid was probably first mentioned in the alchemical writings of Johann Rudolf Glauber. Initially, it was made by nitrating substances such as animal horn, silk, indigo, and natural resin, the synthesis from indigo first being performed by Peter Woulfe in 1771.[4] The German chemist Justus von Liebig had named picric acid Kohlenstickstoffsäure (rendered in French as acide carboazotique). Picric acid was given that name by the French chemist Jean-Baptiste Dumas in 1841.[5] Its synthesis from phenol, and the correct determination of its formula, were accomplished during 1841.[6] In 1799, French chemist Jean-Joseph Welter (1763–1852) produced picric acid by treating silk with nitric acid; he found that potassium picrate could explode.[7] Not until 1830 did chemists think to use picric acid as an explosive. Before then, chemists assumed that only the salts of picric acid were explosive, not the acid itself.[8] In 1871 Hermann Sprengel proved it could be detonated[9] and afterwards most military powers used picric acid as their main high explosive material. A full synthesis was later found by Leonid Valerieovich Kozakov.

Picric acid was the first strongly explosive nitrated organic compound widely considered suitable to withstand the shock of firing in conventional artillery. Nitroglycerine and nitrocellulose (guncotton) were available earlier, but shock sensitivity sometimes caused detonation in an artillery barrel at the time of firing. In 1885, based on research of Hermann Sprengel, French chemist Eugène Turpin patented the use of pressed and cast picric acid in blasting charges and artillery shells. In 1887 the French government adopted a mixture of picric acid and guncotton with the name Melinite. In 1888, Britain started manufacturing a very similar mixture in Lydd, Kent, with the name Lyddite. Japan followed with an alternative stabilization approach known as Shimose powder which, instead of attempting to stabilize the material itself, removed its contact with metal by coating the inside of the shells with layer(s) of resin and wax.[10] In 1889, a mixture of ammonium cresylate with trinitrocresol, or an ammonium salt of trinitrocresol, started to be manufactured with the name Ecrasite in Austria-Hungary. By 1894 Russia was manufacturing artillery shells filled with picric acid. Ammonium picrate (known as Dunnite or explosive D) was used by the United States beginning in 1906. However, shells filled with picric acid become unstable if the compound reacts with the metal shell or fuze casings to form metal picrates which are more sensitive than the parent phenol. The sensitivity of picric acid was demonstrated by the Halifax Explosion.

 
Workers filling shells with liquid melinite at a French munitions factory during WWI

Picric acid was used in the Battle of Omdurman,[11] the Second Boer War,[12] the Russo-Japanese War,[13] and World War I.[14] Germany began filling artillery shells with trinitrotoluene (TNT) in 1902. Toluene was less readily available than phenol, and TNT is less powerful than picric acid, but the improved safety of munitions manufacturing and storage caused the replacement of picric acid by TNT for most military purposes between the World Wars.[15]

Efforts to control the availability of phenol, the precursor to picric acid, emphasize its importance in World War I. Germans are reported to have bought US supplies of phenol and converted it to acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) to keep it from the Allies. At the time, phenol was obtained from coal as a co-product of coke ovens and the manufacture of gas for gas lighting. Laclede Gas reports being asked to expand production of phenol (and toluene) to assist the war effort.[16] Both Monsanto[17] and Dow Chemical[18] began manufacturing synthetic phenol in 1915, with Dow being the main producer. Dow describes picric acid as "the main battlefield explosive used by the French. Large amounts [of phenol] also went to Japan, where it was made into picric acid sold to the Russians."[19]

Thomas Edison needed phenol to manufacture phonograph records. He responded by undertaking production of phenol at his Silver Lake, New Jersey, facility using processes developed by his chemists.[20] He built two plants with a capacity of six tons of phenol per day. Production began the first week of September, one month after hostilities began in Europe. He built two plants to produce the raw material benzene at Johnstown, Pennsylvania, and Bessemer, Alabama, replacing supplies previously from Germany. Edison manufactured aniline dyes, which had previously been supplied by the German dye trust. Other wartime products included xylene, p-phenylenediamine, shellac, and pyrophyllite. Wartime shortages made these ventures profitable. In 1915, his production capacity was fully committed by midyear.[citation needed]

Synthesis edit

The aromatic ring of phenol is activated towards electrophilic substitution reactions, and attempted nitration of phenol, even with dilute nitric acid, results in the formation of high molecular weight tars. In order to minimize these side reactions, anhydrous phenol is sulfonated with fuming sulfuric acid, and the resulting p-hydroxyphenylsulfonic acid is then nitrated with concentrated nitric acid. During this reaction, nitro groups are introduced, and the sulfonic acid group is displaced. The reaction is highly exothermic, and careful temperature control is required. Another method of picric acid synthesis is direct nitration of 2,4-dinitrophenol with nitric acid.[21][22] It crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Pca21 with a = 9.13 Å, b = 18.69 Å, c = 9.79 Å and α = β = γ = 90°.[23]

Uses edit

By far the greatest use of picric acid has been in ammunitions and explosives. Explosive D, also known as Dunnite, is the ammonium salt of picric acid. Dunnite is more powerful but less stable than the more common explosive TNT (which is produced in a similar process to picric acid but with toluene as the feedstock). Picramide, formed by aminating picric acid (typically beginning with Dunnite), can be further aminated to produce the very stable explosive TATB.

It has found some use in organic chemistry for the preparation of crystalline salts of organic bases (picrates) for the purpose of identification and characterization.

Optical metallography edit

In metallurgy, a 4% picric acid in ethanol etch termed "picral" has been commonly used in optical metallography to reveal prior austenite grain boundaries in ferritic steels. The hazards associated with picric acid have meant it has largely been replaced with other chemical etchants. However, it is still used to etch magnesium alloys, such as AZ31.

Histology edit

Bouin solution is a common picric-acid–containing fixative solution used for histology specimens.[24] It improves the staining of acid dyes, but it can also result in hydrolysis of any DNA in the sample.[25]

Picric acid is used in the preparation of Picrosirius red, a histological stain for collagen.[26][27]

Blood tests edit

Clinical chemistry laboratory testing utilizes picric acid for the Jaffe reaction to test for creatinine. It forms a colored complex that can be measured using spectroscopy.[28]

Picric acid forms red isopurpurate with hydrogen cyanide (HCN). By photometric measurement of the resulting dye picric acid can be used to quantify hydrogen cyanide.[29]

During the early 20th century, picric acid was used to measure blood glucose levels. When glucose, picric acid and sodium carbonate are combined and heated, a characteristic red color forms. With a calibrating glucose solution, the red color can be used to measure the glucose levels added. This is known as the Lewis and Benedict method of measuring glucose.[30]

Skin dye edit

Much less commonly, wet picric acid has been used as a skin dye, or temporary branding agent.[citation needed] It reacts with proteins in the skin to give a dark brown color that may last as long as a month.[citation needed]

Antiseptic edit

During the early 20th century, picric acid was stocked in pharmacies as an antiseptic and as a treatment for burns, malaria, herpes, and smallpox. Picric-acid–soaked gauze was commonly stocked in first aid kits from that period as a burn treatment. It was notably used for the treatment of burns suffered by victims of the Hindenburg disaster in 1937. Picric acid was used as a treatment for trench foot suffered by soldiers stationed on the Western Front during World War I.[31]

Picric acid has been used for many years by fly tyers to dye mole skins and feathers a dark olive green for use as fishing lures. Its popularity has been tempered by its toxic nature.[citation needed]

Safety edit

Modern safety precautions recommend storing picric acid wet, to minimize the danger of explosion. Dry picric acid is relatively sensitive to shock and friction, so laboratories that use it store it in bottles under a layer of water, rendering it safe. Glass or plastic bottles are required, as picric acid can easily form metal picrate salts that are even more sensitive and hazardous than the acid itself. Industrially, picric acid is especially hazardous because it is volatile and slowly sublimes even at room temperature. Over time, the buildup of picrates on exposed metal surfaces can constitute an explosion hazard.[32]

Picric acid gauze, if found in antique first aid kits, presents a safety hazard because picric acid of that vintage (60–90 years old) will have become crystallized and unstable,[33] and may have formed metal picrates from long storage in a metal first aid case.

Bomb disposal units are often called to dispose of picric acid if it has dried out.[34][35] In the United States there was an effort to remove dried picric acid containers from high school laboratories during the 1980s.

Munitions containing picric acid may be found in sunken warships. The buildup of metal picrates over time renders them shock-sensitive and extremely hazardous. It is recommended that shipwrecks that contain such munitions not be disturbed in any way.[36] The hazard may subside when the shells become corroded enough to admit seawater as these materials are water-soluble.[36] Currently there are various fluorescent probes to sense and detect picric acid in very minute quantity.[37]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry: IUPAC Recommendations and Preferred Names 2013 (Blue Book). Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry. 2014. p. 691. doi:10.1039/9781849733069-FP001. ISBN 978-0-85404-182-4.
  2. ^ a b c d NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards. "#0515". National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
  3. ^ "Picric acid". Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations (IDLH). National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
  4. ^ Peter Woulfe (1771) "Experiments to shew the nature of aurum mosaicum," Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 61: 114–130. See pages 127–130: "A method of dying wool and silk, of a yellow colour, with indigo; and also with several other blue and red colouring substances." and "Receipt for making the yellow dye." — where Woulfe treats indigo with nitric acid ("acid of nitre").
  5. ^ Dumas, J. (1841). "Quatrième mémoire sur les types chimiques" [Fourth memoir on chemical types]. Annales de Chimie et de Physique. 3rd series (in French). 2: 204–232. From p. 228: "C'est sous ce nom que j'ai désigné l'acide carboazotique, ..." (It is by this name [i.e., picric acid] that I designated carboazotic acid, ... )
  6. ^ Auguste Laurent (1841) "Sur le phényle et ses dérivés" (On phenol and its derivatives), Annales de Chimie et de Physique, series 3, 3: 195–228; see especially pages 221–228.
  7. ^ Welter (1799). "Sur quelques matières particulières, trouvées dans les substances animals, traitées par l'acide nitrique" [On some particular materials, found in animal substances, treated with nitric acid]. Annales de Chimie et de Physique. 1st series (in French). 29: 301–305. From p. 303: "Le lendemain je trouvai la capsule tapisée de cristaux dorés qui avoient la finesse de la soie, qui détonoient comme la poudre à canon, et qui, à mon avis, en auroient produit l'effet dans une arme à feu." (The next day, I found the crucible covered with golden crystals which had the fineness of silk, which detonated like gun powder, and which, in my opinion, would produce the same effect in a firearm.) Welter named picric acid amer (bitter): from p. 304: " ... je nommerai amer." ( ... I will name it "bitter".)
  8. ^ A theory to explain why picrate salts detonated whereas picric acid itself didn't, was proposed by the French chemists Antoine Fourcroy and Louis Vauquelin in 1806 and reiterated by the French chemist Michel Chevreul in 1809. Picric acid evidently contained enough oxygen within itself — i.e., it was "super-oxygenated" (suroxigéné) (Fourcroy and Vauquelin, 1806), p. 543; (Chevreul, 1809), p. 129) — to combust completely even in the absence of air (because even in the absence of air, heat could transform it completely into gases, leaving no carbon).((Fourcroy and Vauquelin, 1806), pp. 542–543); (Chevreul, 1809), pp. 127–128) However, when picric acid was burned, the heat that was generated, caused some of the acid to evaporate, dissipating so much heat that only burning, not detonation, occurred. By contrast, picrate salts were solids that did not sublimate, so they did not dissipate heat; hence they did detonate.((Fourcroy and Vauquelin, 1806), p. 542); (Chevreul, 1809), pp. 129–130) See:
    • Fourcroy; Vauquelin (1806). "Mémoire sur la découverte d'une nouvelle matière inflammable et détonnante, formée par l'action de l'acide nitrique sur l'indigo et les matières animales" [Memoir on the discovery of a new flammable and explosive substance, formed by the action of nitric acid on indigo and animal substances]. Mémoires de l'Institute des Sciences et Arts (in French). 6: 531–543.
    • Chevreul (1809). "Extrait d'un mémoire sur les substances amères formées par la réaction de l'acide nitrique sur l'indigo" [Extract from a memoir on the bitter substances formed by the reaction of nitric acid with indigo]. Annales de Chimie et de Physique (in French). 72: 113–142.
  9. ^ Note:
    • In March 1871, Sprengel detonated picric acid at the gunpowder works of John Hall & Sons in Faversham in Kent, England.
    • Sprengel filed patents in Britain for "safety explosives" (i.e., stable explosives) on April 6, 1871 (no. 921), and on October 5, 1871 (no. 2642); in the latter patent, Sprengel proposed using picric acid dissolved in nitric acid as an explosive.
    • Hermann Sprengel (1873) "On a new class of explosives which are non-explosive during their manufacture, storage, and transport", Journal of the Chemical Society, 26 : 796–808 doi:10.1039/js8732600796.
    • Hermann Sprengel, The Discovery of Picric Acid (Melinite, Lyddite) "As a Powerful Explosive" ..., 2nd ed. (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1903). This pamphlet is a collection of (splenetic) letters in which Sprengel defends his priority in the use of picric acid as a high explosive.
  10. ^ Koike, Shigeki (2006). "The Russo-Japanese War and the system of SHIMOSE gunpowder" (PDF). Bulletin of Papers (in Japanese). Takasaki City University of Economics. 1 (49).
  11. ^ Brown, G.I. (1998). The big bang: a history of explosives. Stroud, UK: Sutton Pub. pp. 151–163. ISBN 0-7509-1878-0. OCLC 40348081.
  12. ^ Wisser, John Philip (1901). The second Boer War, 1899–1900. Hudson-Kimberly. p. 243. Retrieved 2009-07-22.
  13. ^ Dunnite Smashes Strongest Armor, The New York Times, August 18, 1907
  14. ^ Marc Ferro. The Great War. London and New York: Routeladge Classics, p. 98.
  15. ^ Brown, G.I. (1998), The Big Bang: a History of Explosives, Sutton Publishing ISBN 0-7509-1878-0 pp.151–163
  16. ^ Beck, Bill (2007) Laclede Gas and St. Louis: 150 Years Working Together, 1857–2007, Laclede Gas Company, ISBN 978-0-9710910-1-6 p. 64
  17. ^ Forrestal, Dan J. (1977), Faith, Hope & $5000: The Story of Monsanto, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-671-22784-X[2] p. 24
  18. ^ Brandt, E.N. (1997), Growth Company: Dow Chemical's First Century, Michigan State University, ISBN 0-87013-426-4 p. 77, 97 and 244
  19. ^ Brandt, E.N. (1997), Growth Company: Dow Chemical's First Century, Michigan State University, ISBN 0-87013-426-4 p. 97
  20. ^ Conot, Robert (1979), A Streak of Luck: The Life & Legend of Thomas Alva Edison, Seaview Books, NY, p 413-4
  21. ^ Agrawal, Jai Prakash; Hodgson, Robert (2007-01-11). Organic Chemistry of Explosives. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780470059357.
  22. ^ Green, Arthur George (1919-04-01). "Manufacture of picric acid. US Patent US1299171A". patents.google.com. Retrieved 2018-08-26.
  23. ^ V. Bertolasi, P. Gilli, G. Gilli: Hydrogen Bonding and Electron Donor-Acceptor (EDA) Interactions Controlling the Crystal Packing of Picric Acid and Its Adducts with Nitrogen Bases. Their Rationalization in Terms of the pKa Equalization and Electron-Pair Saturation Concepts. In: Cryst. Growth Des. 2011, 11, 2724–2735, doi:10.1021/cg101007a.
  24. ^ Carson, Freida L.; Hladik, Christa (2009). Histotechnology: A Self-Instructional Text (3 ed.). Hong Kong: American Society for Clinical Pathology Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-89189-581-7.
  25. ^ Llewellyn, Brian D (February 2009). . StainsFile. Archived from the original on 31 May 2015. Retrieved 28 September 2012.
  26. ^ Lattouf R, Younes R, Lutomski D, Naaman N, Goudeau G, Senni K, Changotade S (2014). "Picrosirius Red Staining: A Useful Tool to Appraise Collagen Networks in Normal and Pathological Tissues". Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry. 62 (10): 751–758. doi:10.1369/0022155414545787. PMID 25023614.
  27. ^ Junqueira LC, Bignolas G, Brentani RR (1979). "Picrosirius staining plus polarization microscopy, a specific method for collagen detection in tissue sections". The Histochemical Journal. 11 (4): 447–455. doi:10.1007/BF01002772. PMID 91593.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 2020-08-06. Retrieved 2011-03-26.
  29. ^ Quantification of total cyanide content in stone fruit kernels. 2019-04-30 at the Wayback Machine pdf, Pg.33
  30. ^ 2. Tacomed.com. Archived from the original on 16 December 2018. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  31. ^ (1922) [1] History of the Great War - Surgery of the War, Vol. 1, Pg. 175.
  32. ^ "Picric Acid, Wet". HAZARD.com Web Site. 21 April 1998. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
  33. ^ Harding, Evan; Searle, Jamie (7 July 2021). "Potentially explosive substance was in Catlins museum for decades". Stuff. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  34. ^ . irishtimes.com. Irish Times. 1 October 2010. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  35. ^ "Unstable chemicals made safe by army". rte.ie. RTÉ News. 3 November 2010. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  36. ^ a b Albright, p.78
  37. ^ Arunkumar, Chellaiah; Sujatha, Subramaniam (26 Oct 2015). "Protonation and axial ligation intervened fluorescence turn-off sensing of picric acid in freebase and tin(iv) porphyrins". RSC Advances. 5 (113): 93243. Bibcode:2015RSCAd...593243S. doi:10.1039/C5RA18310C.

Further reading edit

  • Albright, Richard (2011). Cleanup of Chemical and Explosive Munitions: Location, Identification and Environmental Remediation. William Andrew.
  • Brown, David K.; McCallum, Iain (2001). "Ammunition Explosions in World War I". Warship International. International Naval Research Organization. XXXVIII (1): 58–69. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Cooper, Paul W., Explosives Engineering, New York: Wiley-VCH, 1996. ISBN 0-471-18636-8
  • CDC - NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards

picric, acid, lyddite, redirects, here, rock, type, lydite, organic, compound, with, formula, 3c6h2oh, iupac, name, trinitrophenol, name, picric, comes, from, greek, πικρός, pikros, meaning, bitter, bitter, taste, most, acidic, phenols, like, other, strongly, . Lyddite redirects here For the rock type see Lydite Picric acid is an organic compound with the formula O2N 3C6H2OH Its IUPAC name is 2 4 6 trinitrophenol TNP The name picric comes from Greek pikros pikros meaning bitter due to its bitter taste It is one of the most acidic phenols Like other strongly nitrated organic compounds picric acid is an explosive which is its primary use It has also been used as medicine antiseptic burn treatments and as a dye Picric acid NamesPreferred IUPAC name 2 4 6 Trinitrophenol 1 Systematic IUPAC name 2 4 6 TrinitrobenzenolOther names Picric acid 1 Carbazotic acidPhenol trinitratePicronitric acidTrinitrophenol2 4 6 Trinitro 1 phenol2 Hydroxy 1 3 5 trinitrobenzeneTNPMeliniteLydditeIdentifiersCAS Number 88 89 1 Y3D model JSmol Interactive imageChEBI CHEBI 46149 YChEMBL ChEMBL108541 YChemSpider 6688 YDrugBank DB03651 YECHA InfoCard 100 001 696PubChem CID 6954RTECS number TJ7875000UNII A49OS0F91S YUN number UN1344CompTox Dashboard EPA DTXSID4025909InChI InChI 1S C6H3N3O7 c10 6 4 8 13 14 1 3 7 11 12 2 5 6 9 15 16 h1 2 10H YKey OXNIZHLAWKMVMX UHFFFAOYSA N YInChI 1 C6H3N3O7 c10 6 4 8 13 14 1 3 7 11 12 2 5 6 9 15 16 h1 2 10HKey OXNIZHLAWKMVMX UHFFFAOYAMSMILES O N O c1cc cc N O O c1O N O OPropertiesChemical formula C6H3N3O7Molar mass 229 10 g mol 1Appearance Colorless to yellow solidDensity 1 763 g cm 3 solidMelting point 122 5 C 252 5 F 395 6 K Boiling point gt 300 C 572 F 573 K DetonatesSolubility in water 12 7 g L 1Vapor pressure 1 mmHg 195 C 2 Acidity pKa 0 38Magnetic susceptibility x 84 34 10 6 cm3 molHazardsOccupational safety and health OHS OSH Main hazards explosiveGHS labelling Hazard statements H206 H302 H311 H331Precautionary statements P210 P212 P230 P233 P280 P370 P380 P375 P501NFPA 704 fire diamond 344Flash point 150 C 302 F 423 K 2 Lethal dose or concentration LD LC LDLo lowest published 100 mg kg guinea pig oral 250 mg kg cat oral 120 mg kg rabbit oral 3 NIOSH US health exposure limits PEL Permissible TWA 0 1 mg m3 skin REL Recommended TWA 0 1 mg m3 ST 0 3 mg m3 skin 2 IDLH Immediate danger 75 mg m3 2 Explosive dataDetonation velocity 7 350 m s 1 at r 1 70RE factor 1 20Except where otherwise noted data are given for materials in their standard state at 25 C 77 F 100 kPa Y verify what is Y N Infobox references Contents 1 History 2 Synthesis 3 Uses 3 1 Optical metallography 3 2 Histology 3 3 Blood tests 3 4 Skin dye 3 5 Antiseptic 4 Safety 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingHistory editPicric acid was probably first mentioned in the alchemical writings of Johann Rudolf Glauber Initially it was made by nitrating substances such as animal horn silk indigo and natural resin the synthesis from indigo first being performed by Peter Woulfe in 1771 4 The German chemist Justus von Liebig had named picric acid Kohlenstickstoffsaure rendered in French as acide carboazotique Picric acid was given that name by the French chemist Jean Baptiste Dumas in 1841 5 Its synthesis from phenol and the correct determination of its formula were accomplished during 1841 6 In 1799 French chemist Jean Joseph Welter 1763 1852 produced picric acid by treating silk with nitric acid he found that potassium picrate could explode 7 Not until 1830 did chemists think to use picric acid as an explosive Before then chemists assumed that only the salts of picric acid were explosive not the acid itself 8 In 1871 Hermann Sprengel proved it could be detonated 9 and afterwards most military powers used picric acid as their main high explosive material A full synthesis was later found by Leonid Valerieovich Kozakov Picric acid was the first strongly explosive nitrated organic compound widely considered suitable to withstand the shock of firing in conventional artillery Nitroglycerine and nitrocellulose guncotton were available earlier but shock sensitivity sometimes caused detonation in an artillery barrel at the time of firing In 1885 based on research of Hermann Sprengel French chemist Eugene Turpin patented the use of pressed and cast picric acid in blasting charges and artillery shells In 1887 the French government adopted a mixture of picric acid and guncotton with the name Melinite In 1888 Britain started manufacturing a very similar mixture in Lydd Kent with the name Lyddite Japan followed with an alternative stabilization approach known as Shimose powder which instead of attempting to stabilize the material itself removed its contact with metal by coating the inside of the shells with layer s of resin and wax 10 In 1889 a mixture of ammonium cresylate with trinitrocresol or an ammonium salt of trinitrocresol started to be manufactured with the name Ecrasite in Austria Hungary By 1894 Russia was manufacturing artillery shells filled with picric acid Ammonium picrate known as Dunnite or explosive D was used by the United States beginning in 1906 However shells filled with picric acid become unstable if the compound reacts with the metal shell or fuze casings to form metal picrates which are more sensitive than the parent phenol The sensitivity of picric acid was demonstrated by the Halifax Explosion nbsp Workers filling shells with liquid melinite at a French munitions factory during WWIPicric acid was used in the Battle of Omdurman 11 the Second Boer War 12 the Russo Japanese War 13 and World War I 14 Germany began filling artillery shells with trinitrotoluene TNT in 1902 Toluene was less readily available than phenol and TNT is less powerful than picric acid but the improved safety of munitions manufacturing and storage caused the replacement of picric acid by TNT for most military purposes between the World Wars 15 Efforts to control the availability of phenol the precursor to picric acid emphasize its importance in World War I Germans are reported to have bought US supplies of phenol and converted it to acetylsalicylic acid aspirin to keep it from the Allies At the time phenol was obtained from coal as a co product of coke ovens and the manufacture of gas for gas lighting Laclede Gas reports being asked to expand production of phenol and toluene to assist the war effort 16 Both Monsanto 17 and Dow Chemical 18 began manufacturing synthetic phenol in 1915 with Dow being the main producer Dow describes picric acid as the main battlefield explosive used by the French Large amounts of phenol also went to Japan where it was made into picric acid sold to the Russians 19 Thomas Edison needed phenol to manufacture phonograph records He responded by undertaking production of phenol at his Silver Lake New Jersey facility using processes developed by his chemists 20 He built two plants with a capacity of six tons of phenol per day Production began the first week of September one month after hostilities began in Europe He built two plants to produce the raw material benzene at Johnstown Pennsylvania and Bessemer Alabama replacing supplies previously from Germany Edison manufactured aniline dyes which had previously been supplied by the German dye trust Other wartime products included xylene p phenylenediamine shellac and pyrophyllite Wartime shortages made these ventures profitable In 1915 his production capacity was fully committed by midyear citation needed Synthesis editThe aromatic ring of phenol is activated towards electrophilic substitution reactions and attempted nitration of phenol even with dilute nitric acid results in the formation of high molecular weight tars In order to minimize these side reactions anhydrous phenol is sulfonated with fuming sulfuric acid and the resulting p hydroxyphenylsulfonic acid is then nitrated with concentrated nitric acid During this reaction nitro groups are introduced and the sulfonic acid group is displaced The reaction is highly exothermic and careful temperature control is required Another method of picric acid synthesis is direct nitration of 2 4 dinitrophenol with nitric acid 21 22 It crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Pca21 with a 9 13 A b 18 69 A c 9 79 A and a b g 90 23 Uses editBy far the greatest use of picric acid has been in ammunitions and explosives Explosive D also known as Dunnite is the ammonium salt of picric acid Dunnite is more powerful but less stable than the more common explosive TNT which is produced in a similar process to picric acid but with toluene as the feedstock Picramide formed by aminating picric acid typically beginning with Dunnite can be further aminated to produce the very stable explosive TATB It has found some use in organic chemistry for the preparation of crystalline salts of organic bases picrates for the purpose of identification and characterization Optical metallography edit In metallurgy a 4 picric acid in ethanol etch termed picral has been commonly used in optical metallography to reveal prior austenite grain boundaries in ferritic steels The hazards associated with picric acid have meant it has largely been replaced with other chemical etchants However it is still used to etch magnesium alloys such as AZ31 Histology edit Bouin solution is a common picric acid containing fixative solution used for histology specimens 24 It improves the staining of acid dyes but it can also result in hydrolysis of any DNA in the sample 25 Picric acid is used in the preparation of Picrosirius red a histological stain for collagen 26 27 Blood tests edit Clinical chemistry laboratory testing utilizes picric acid for the Jaffe reaction to test for creatinine It forms a colored complex that can be measured using spectroscopy 28 Picric acid forms red isopurpurate with hydrogen cyanide HCN By photometric measurement of the resulting dye picric acid can be used to quantify hydrogen cyanide 29 During the early 20th century picric acid was used to measure blood glucose levels When glucose picric acid and sodium carbonate are combined and heated a characteristic red color forms With a calibrating glucose solution the red color can be used to measure the glucose levels added This is known as the Lewis and Benedict method of measuring glucose 30 Skin dye edit Much less commonly wet picric acid has been used as a skin dye or temporary branding agent citation needed It reacts with proteins in the skin to give a dark brown color that may last as long as a month citation needed Antiseptic edit During the early 20th century picric acid was stocked in pharmacies as an antiseptic and as a treatment for burns malaria herpes and smallpox Picric acid soaked gauze was commonly stocked in first aid kits from that period as a burn treatment It was notably used for the treatment of burns suffered by victims of the Hindenburg disaster in 1937 Picric acid was used as a treatment for trench foot suffered by soldiers stationed on the Western Front during World War I 31 Picric acid has been used for many years by fly tyers to dye mole skins and feathers a dark olive green for use as fishing lures Its popularity has been tempered by its toxic nature citation needed Safety editModern safety precautions recommend storing picric acid wet to minimize the danger of explosion Dry picric acid is relatively sensitive to shock and friction so laboratories that use it store it in bottles under a layer of water rendering it safe Glass or plastic bottles are required as picric acid can easily form metal picrate salts that are even more sensitive and hazardous than the acid itself Industrially picric acid is especially hazardous because it is volatile and slowly sublimes even at room temperature Over time the buildup of picrates on exposed metal surfaces can constitute an explosion hazard 32 Picric acid gauze if found in antique first aid kits presents a safety hazard because picric acid of that vintage 60 90 years old will have become crystallized and unstable 33 and may have formed metal picrates from long storage in a metal first aid case Bomb disposal units are often called to dispose of picric acid if it has dried out 34 35 In the United States there was an effort to remove dried picric acid containers from high school laboratories during the 1980s Munitions containing picric acid may be found in sunken warships The buildup of metal picrates over time renders them shock sensitive and extremely hazardous It is recommended that shipwrecks that contain such munitions not be disturbed in any way 36 The hazard may subside when the shells become corroded enough to admit seawater as these materials are water soluble 36 Currently there are various fluorescent probes to sense and detect picric acid in very minute quantity 37 See also editShellite explosive an explosive containing picric acid formerly used in naval shells Table of explosive detonation velocities RE factor Verhoeff s stain Styphnic acidReferences edit a b Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry IUPAC Recommendations and Preferred Names 2013 Blue Book Cambridge Royal Society of Chemistry 2014 p 691 doi 10 1039 9781849733069 FP001 ISBN 978 0 85404 182 4 a b c d NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards 0515 National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH Picric acid Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations IDLH National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH Peter Woulfe 1771 Experiments to shew the nature of aurum mosaicum Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 61 114 130 See pages 127 130 A method of dying wool and silk of a yellow colour with indigo and also with several other blue and red colouring substances and Receipt for making the yellow dye where Woulfe treats indigo with nitric acid acid of nitre Dumas J 1841 Quatrieme memoire sur les types chimiques Fourth memoir on chemical types Annales de Chimie et de Physique 3rd series in French 2 204 232 From p 228 C est sous ce nom que j ai designe l acide carboazotique It is by this name i e picric acid that I designated carboazotic acid Auguste Laurent 1841 Sur le phenyle et ses derives On phenol and its derivatives Annales de Chimie et de Physique series 3 3 195 228 see especially pages 221 228 Welter 1799 Sur quelques matieres particulieres trouvees dans les substances animals traitees par l acide nitrique On some particular materials found in animal substances treated with nitric acid Annales de Chimie et de Physique 1st series in French 29 301 305 From p 303 Le lendemain je trouvai la capsule tapisee de cristaux dores qui avoient la finesse de la soie qui detonoient comme la poudre a canon et qui a mon avis en auroient produit l effet dans une arme a feu The next day I found the crucible covered with golden crystals which had the fineness of silk which detonated like gun powder and which in my opinion would produce the same effect in a firearm Welter named picric acid amer bitter from p 304 je nommeraiamer I will name it bitter A theory to explain why picrate salts detonated whereas picric acid itself didn t was proposed by the French chemists Antoine Fourcroy and Louis Vauquelin in 1806 and reiterated by the French chemist Michel Chevreul in 1809 Picric acid evidently contained enough oxygen within itself i e it was super oxygenated suroxigene Fourcroy and Vauquelin 1806 p 543 Chevreul 1809 p 129 to combust completely even in the absence of air because even in the absence of air heat could transform it completely into gases leaving no carbon Fourcroy and Vauquelin 1806 pp 542 543 Chevreul 1809 pp 127 128 However when picric acid was burned the heat that was generated caused some of the acid to evaporate dissipating so much heat that only burning not detonation occurred By contrast picrate salts were solids that did not sublimate so they did not dissipate heat hence they did detonate Fourcroy and Vauquelin 1806 p 542 Chevreul 1809 pp 129 130 See Fourcroy Vauquelin 1806 Memoire sur la decouverte d une nouvelle matiere inflammable et detonnante formee par l action de l acide nitrique sur l indigo et les matieres animales Memoir on the discovery of a new flammable and explosive substance formed by the action of nitric acid on indigo and animal substances Memoires de l Institute des Sciences et Arts in French 6 531 543 Chevreul 1809 Extrait d un memoire sur les substances ameres formees par la reaction de l acide nitrique sur l indigo Extract from a memoir on the bitter substances formed by the reaction of nitric acid with indigo Annales de Chimie et de Physique in French 72 113 142 Note In March 1871 Sprengel detonated picric acid at the gunpowder works of John Hall amp Sons in Faversham in Kent England Sprengel filed patents in Britain for safety explosives i e stable explosives on April 6 1871 no 921 and on October 5 1871 no 2642 in the latter patent Sprengel proposed using picric acid dissolved in nitric acid as an explosive Hermann Sprengel 1873 On a new class of explosives which are non explosive during their manufacture storage and transport Journal of the Chemical Society 26 796 808 doi 10 1039 js8732600796 Hermann Sprengel The Discovery of Picric Acid Melinite Lyddite As a Powerful Explosive 2nd ed London Eyre amp Spottiswoode 1903 This pamphlet is a collection of splenetic letters in which Sprengel defends his priority in the use of picric acid as a high explosive Koike Shigeki 2006 The Russo Japanese War and the system of SHIMOSE gunpowder PDF Bulletin of Papers in Japanese Takasaki City University of Economics 1 49 Brown G I 1998 The big bang a history of explosives Stroud UK Sutton Pub pp 151 163 ISBN 0 7509 1878 0 OCLC 40348081 Wisser John Philip 1901 The second Boer War 1899 1900 Hudson Kimberly p 243 Retrieved 2009 07 22 Dunnite Smashes Strongest Armor The New York Times August 18 1907 Marc Ferro The Great War London and New York Routeladge Classics p 98 Brown G I 1998 The Big Bang a History of Explosives Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 1878 0 pp 151 163 Beck Bill 2007 Laclede Gas and St Louis 150 Years Working Together 1857 2007 Laclede Gas Company ISBN 978 0 9710910 1 6 p 64 Forrestal Dan J 1977 Faith Hope amp 5000 The Story of Monsanto Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 22784 X 2 p 24 Brandt E N 1997 Growth Company Dow Chemical s First Century Michigan State University ISBN 0 87013 426 4 p 77 97 and 244 Brandt E N 1997 Growth Company Dow Chemical s First Century Michigan State University ISBN 0 87013 426 4 p 97 Conot Robert 1979 A Streak of Luck The Life amp Legend of Thomas Alva Edison Seaview Books NY p 413 4 Agrawal Jai Prakash Hodgson Robert 2007 01 11 Organic Chemistry of Explosives John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780470059357 Green Arthur George 1919 04 01 Manufacture of picric acid US Patent US1299171A patents google com Retrieved 2018 08 26 V Bertolasi P Gilli G Gilli Hydrogen Bonding and Electron Donor Acceptor EDA Interactions Controlling the Crystal Packing of Picric Acid and Its Adducts with Nitrogen Bases Their Rationalization in Terms of the pKa Equalization and Electron Pair Saturation Concepts In Cryst Growth Des 2011 11 2724 2735 doi 10 1021 cg101007a Carson Freida L Hladik Christa 2009 Histotechnology A Self Instructional Text 3 ed Hong Kong American Society for Clinical Pathology Press p 19 ISBN 978 0 89189 581 7 Llewellyn Brian D February 2009 Picric Acid StainsFile Archived from the original on 31 May 2015 Retrieved 28 September 2012 Lattouf R Younes R Lutomski D Naaman N Goudeau G Senni K Changotade S 2014 Picrosirius Red Staining A Useful Tool to Appraise Collagen Networks in Normal and Pathological Tissues Journal of Histochemistry amp Cytochemistry 62 10 751 758 doi 10 1369 0022155414545787 PMID 25023614 Junqueira LC Bignolas G Brentani RR 1979 Picrosirius staining plus polarization microscopy a specific method for collagen detection in tissue sections The Histochemical Journal 11 4 447 455 doi 10 1007 BF01002772 PMID 91593 Creatinine Direct Procedure on CimaScientific Archived from the original on 2020 08 06 Retrieved 2011 03 26 Quantification of total cyanide content in stone fruit kernels Archived 2019 04 30 at the Wayback Machine pdf Pg 33 2 Measuring blood glucose levels in the 1920s Tacomed com Archived from the original on 16 December 2018 Retrieved 13 June 2017 1922 1 History of the Great War Surgery of the War Vol 1 Pg 175 Picric Acid Wet HAZARD com Web Site 21 April 1998 Retrieved 13 April 2021 Harding Evan Searle Jamie 7 July 2021 Potentially explosive substance was in Catlins museum for decades Stuff Retrieved 20 July 2021 Bomb squad called to Dublin lab irishtimes com Irish Times 1 October 2010 Archived from the original on 22 October 2012 Retrieved 22 July 2011 Unstable chemicals made safe by army rte ie RTE News 3 November 2010 Retrieved 22 July 2011 a b Albright p 78 Arunkumar Chellaiah Sujatha Subramaniam 26 Oct 2015 Protonation and axial ligation intervened fluorescence turn off sensing of picric acid in freebase and tin iv porphyrins RSC Advances 5 113 93243 Bibcode 2015RSCAd 593243S doi 10 1039 C5RA18310C Further reading editAlbright Richard 2011 Cleanup of Chemical and Explosive Munitions Location Identification and Environmental Remediation William Andrew Brown David K McCallum Iain 2001 Ammunition Explosions in World War I Warship International International Naval Research Organization XXXVIII 1 58 69 ISSN 0043 0374 Cooper Paul W Explosives Engineering New York Wiley VCH 1996 ISBN 0 471 18636 8 CDC NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Picric acid amp oldid 1188006462, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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