Ethyl nitrate explained

Ethyl nitrate is the ethyl ester of nitric acid and has the chemical formula . It is a colourless, volatile, explosive, and extremely flammable liquid. It is used in organic synthesis with use as a nitrating agent and as an intermediate in the preparation of some drugs, dyes, and perfumes.[1] Like nitroglycerin, it's a vasodialator.

Ethyl nitrate is found in the atmosphere, where it can react with other gases to form smog. The pollutant was originally thought to have been formed mainly by the combustion of fossil fuels. However recent analysis of ocean water samples reveal that in places where cool water rises from the deep, the water is saturated with alkyl nitrates, likely formed by natural processes.[2]

Preparation

Ethyl nitrate has been prepared by bubbling gaseous nitryl fluoride through ethanol at −10 °C.[3] The reaction was subsequently studied in detail.[4] [5]

Ethyl nitrate can be prepared by nitrating ethanol with fuming nitric acid or a mixture of concentrated sulfuric and nitric acids. Urea should be added to remove any nitrous acid and prevent explosion.[6] Further purifying by distillation carries a risk of explosion.[7]

A nucleophilic substitution reaction of ethyl halides and silver nitrate can also yield ethyl nitrate. Again, purification poses explosion risks.

Chemical reactions

Ethyl nitrate can be reduced with stannous chloride to form hydroxylammonium chloride, though product separation is somewhat difficult.[8]

Explosive properties

Ethyl nitrate is a sensitive explosive that is prone to detonating upon impact or high temperatures, though is less so than methyl nitrate. It has a detonation velocity of 6,010 m/s,[9] and is therefore a high explosive.

References

  1. Book: Aromatic nitration. Schofield, Kenneth. 1980. Cambridge University Press. 9780521233620. Cambridge. 6357479. 94.
  2. News: Ocean yields gases that had seemed humanmade . S. Perkins . . August 12, 2002 .
  3. Nitryl fluoride as a nitrating agent. G. Hetherington and R. L. Robinson. 1954. . 10.1039/JR9540003512. 3512 .
  4. B. S. Fedorov and L. T. Eremenko. Nitration of alcohols by nitryl fluoride. 1997. 46. 5. . 10.1007/BF02496138. 1022–1023.
  5. Explosives, 6th Edition, R. Meyer, J. Kohler, A. Homburg; page 125
  6. Book: William M. Cumming, I. Vance Hopper . Systematic Organic Chemistry 3ed . 1937.
  7. Book: Cohen, Julius B. (Julius Berend). Theoretical organic chemistry. 1920. London, Macmillan. University of California Libraries. 189.
  8. Dumreicher . Oscar Freih v. . December 1880 . Untersuchungen über die Einwirkung von Zinnchlorür auf die Stickstoffsauerstoffverbindungen . Monatshefte für Chemie . de . 1 . 1 . 724–754 . 10.1007/BF01517102 . 0026-9247.
  9. Kozak . G. D. . September 1998 . Measurement and calculation of the ideal detonation velocity for liquid nitrocompounds . Combustion, Explosion, and Shock Waves . en . 34 . 5 . 581–586 . 10.1007/BF02672682 . 0010-5082.