Acetanilide

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Acetanilide
Acetanilide
Acetanilide Ball and Stick.png
Acetanilide Space Fill.png
Names
Preferred IUPAC name
N-Phenylacetamide[1]
Other names
Acetanilide[1]
N-Phenylethanamide
Identifiers
103-84-4 YesY
3D model (Jmol) Interactive image
ChEBI CHEBI:28884 YesY
ChEMBL ChEMBL269644 YesY
ChemSpider 880 YesY
ECHA InfoCard 100.002.864
EC Number 203-150-7
KEGG C07565 YesY
UNII SP86R356CC YesY
Properties[2][3]
C8H9NO
Molar mass 135.17 g·mol−1
Odor Odorless
Density 1.219 g/cm3
Melting point 114.3 °C (237.7 °F; 387.4 K)
Boiling point 304 °C (579 °F; 577 K)
<0.56 g/100 mL (25 °C)
Solubility Soluble in ethanol, diethyl ether, acetone, benzene
log P 1.16 (23 °C)
Vapor pressure 2 Pa (20 °C)
2.71
Hazards[4][5]
Safety data sheet External MSDS
GHS pictograms Acute Tox. (oral) 4
GHS signal word WARNING
H302
P264, P270, P301+312, P330, P501
Flash point 174 °C (345 °F; 447 K)
545 °C (1,013 °F; 818 K)
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
YesY verify (what is YesYN ?)
Infobox references
Drying acetanilide
Acetanilide Crystals on a watch glass.

Acetanilide[6] is an odourless solid chemical of leaf or flake-like appearance. It is also known as N-phenylacetamide, acetanil, or acetanilid, and was formerly known by the trade name Antifebrin.

Preparation and properties[edit]

Acetanilide can be produced by reacting acetic anhydride with aniline:

C6H5NH2 + (CH3CO)2O → C6H5NHCOCH3 + CH3COOH

The preparation used to be a traditional experiment in introductory organic chemistry lab classes,[7] but it has now been widely replaced by the preparation of either paracetamol or aspirin, both of which teach the same practical techniques (especially recrystallization of the product) but which avoid the use of aniline, a suspected carcinogen.

Acetanilide is slightly soluble in water, and stable under most conditions.[5] Pure crystals are plate shaped and colorless to white.

Applications[edit]

Acetanilide is used as an inhibitor of hydrogen peroxide decomposition and is used to stabilize cellulose ester varnishes. It has also found uses in the intermediation in rubber accelerator synthesis, dyes and dye intermediate synthesis, and camphor synthesis. Acetanilide is used for the production of 4-acetamidobenzenesulfonyl chloride, a key intermediate for the manufacture of the sulfa drugs.[8] It is also a precursor in the synthesis of penicillin[citation needed] and other pharmaceuticals.[3]

In the 19th century acetanilide was one of a large number of compounds used as experimental photographic developers.

Pharmaceutical use[edit]

Acetanilide was the first aniline derivative found to possess analgesic as well as antipyretic properties, and was quickly introduced into medical practice under the names of Antifebrin by A. Cahn and P. Hepp in 1886.[9] But its (apparent) unacceptable toxic effects, the most alarming being cyanosis due to methemoglobinemia and ultimately liver and kidney damage,[10] prompted the search for supposedly less toxic aniline derivatives such as phenacetin.[11] After several conflicting results over the ensuing fifty years, it was established in 1948 that acetanilide was mostly metabolized to paracetamol (acetaminophen) in the human body, and that it was this metabolite that was responsible for the analgesic and antipyretic properties.[12][10][13][14] The observed methemoglobinemia after acetanilide administration was ascribed to the small proportion of acetanilide that is hydrolyzed to aniline in the body.[note 1] Acetanilide is no longer used as a drug in its own right, although the success of its metabolite – paracetamol (acetaminophen) – is well known (although it is itself toxic in excessive amounts).

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ The presence of aniline as an impurity in 19th century batches of acetanilide drugs cannot be ruled out. In this sense as well, paracetamol (acetaminophen) is safer than acetanilide, as (1) the corresponding impurity would be 4-aminophenol, which is less toxic than aniline; and (2) in vivo hydrolysis of the amide group in paracetamol appears to be negligible.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry : IUPAC Recommendations and Preferred Names 2013 (Blue Book). Cambridge: The Royal Society of Chemistry. 2014. p. 846. doi:10.1039/9781849733069-FP001. ISBN 978-0-85404-182-4. N-Phenyl derivatives of primary amides are called ‘anilides’ and may be named using the term ‘anilide’ in place of ‘amide’ in systematic or retained names of amides. (…) However, names expressing N-substitution by a phenyl group on an amide are preferred IUPAC names. 
  2. ^ Weast, Robert C., ed. (1981). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics (62nd ed.). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. p. C-67. ISBN 0-8493-0462-8. .
  3. ^ a b Acetanilide (PDF), SIDS Initial Assessment Report, Geneva: United Nations Environment Programme, September 2003 .
  4. ^ HSNO Chemical Classification Information Database, New Zealand Environmental Risk Management Authority, retrieved 2009-08-26 .
  5. ^ a b Safety data for acetanilide, Physical Chemistry Laboratory, University of Oxford .
  6. ^ Acetanilide .
  7. ^ See, e.g., The preparation of acetanilide from aniline, Department of Chemistry, University of the West Indies at Mona, Jamaica, retrieved 2009-08-26 ; Reeve, Wilkins; Lowe, Valerie C. (1979), "Preparation of Acetanilide from Nitrobenzene", J. Chem. Educ., 56 (7): 488, doi:10.1021/ed056p488 : the latter preparation includes the reduction of nitrobenzene to aniline.
  8. ^ Ashford's Dictionary of Industrial Chemicals (PDF) (Third ed.). 2011. p. 33. 
  9. ^ Cahn, A.; Hepp, P. (1886), "Das Antifebrin, ein neues Fiebermittel", Centralbl. Klin. Med., 7: 561–64 .
  10. ^ a b Brodie, B. B.; Axelrod, J. (1948), "The estimation of acetanilide and its metabolic products, aniline, N-acetyl p-aminophenol and p-aminophenol (free and total conjugated) in biological fluids and tissues", J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., 94 (1): 22–28, PMID 18885610 .
  11. ^ Bertolini, A.; Ferrari, A.; Ottani, A.; Guerzoni, S.; Tacchi, R.; Leone, S. (2006), "Paracetamol: new vistas of an old drug", CNS Drug Reviews, 12 (3–4): 250–75, doi:10.1111/j.1527-3458.2006.00250.x, PMID 17227290 .
  12. ^ Lester, D.; Greenberg, L. A. (1947), "Metabolic fate of acetanilide and other aniline derivatives. II. Major metabolites of acetanilide in the blood", J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., 90 (1): 68, PMID 20241897 .
  13. ^ Brodie, B. B.; Axelrod, J. (1948), "The fate of acetanilide in man" (PDF), J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., 94 (1): 29–38, PMID 18885611 
  14. ^ Flinn, Frederick B.; Brodie, Bernard B. (1948), "The effect on the pain threshold of N-acetyl p-aminophenol, a product derived in the body from acetanilide", J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., 94 (1): 76–77, PMID 18885618 .