Acrylonitrile

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(Redirected from 2-Propenenitrile)
</table> Acrylonitrile (CH2=CH-CN), is a pungent smelling, extremely flammable organic liquid. It is also known as cyanoethylene (cyanoethene) or vinylcyanide. Its IUPAC name is 2-propenenitrile.
Properties

Image:Acrylonitrile-skeletal.png

General

Name Acrylonitrile
Chemical formula C3H3N
Appearance Colourless to pale yellow liquid

Physical

Formula weight 53.06 amu
Melting point 189 K (-84 °C)
Boiling point 350 K (77 °C)
Density 0.8 ×103 kg/m3
Solubility 7 g/100 mL at 20 °C

Thermochemistry

ΔfH0liquid kJ/mol
S0liquid, 1 bar J/mol·K

Safety

Flammability Extremely flammable and highly reactive. Gives off toxic fumes whilst burning.
Ingestion Headache, excitement, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, stupor, and coma.
Inhalation Headache, dizziness, unconsciousness and coma. High concentrations may be fatal.
Skin Irritation. Can be absorbed through skin. Repeated exposures cause sensitization.
Eyes Severe irritation, pain and blurred vision.
More info Hazardous Chemical Database

SI units were used where possible. Unless otherwise stated, standard conditions were used.

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Contents

Uses

Acrylonitrile is used principally as a precursor monomer in the manufacture of synthetic polymers, especially polyacrylonitrile, acrylic fibers, nylon, and synthetic rubber. Small amounts are also used as a fumigant. Acrylonitrile and derivatives such as 2-chloro-acrylonitrile are dienophiles in Diels-Alder reactions.

Production

Most industrial acrylonitrile is produced through the Sohio process, the catalytic ammoxidation of propylene:

CH3-CH=CH2 + NH3 + 1.5 O2 → CH2=CH-C≡N + 3 H2O

World annual production in 2001 was 4 million tonnes, with just under half of that coming from the United States.

Safety

Acrylonitrile is highly flammable, and can be easily ignited from a spark, or spontaneously on contact with certain oxidizers. Unless chemical stabilizers called "inhibitors" are added, it may also undergo explosive polymerization when heated, on contact with strong alkalis, or when exposed to ultraviolet light. The burning material releases fumes of hydrogen cyanide and oxides of nitrogen. Store in a well ventilated flammable material store away from incompatible materials, and avoid sparks.

The material is also toxic. Contact with skin or the eyes produces severe irritation. Inhalation or prolonged skin contact can produce confusion, unconsciousness, and death. Acrylonitrile is classified as a possible human carcinogen (IARC group 2B). Wear approved safety goggles, gloves and respirator during handling.

External links

es:Acrilonitrilo nl:Acrylonitril ja:アクリロニトリル

pl:Akrylonitryl