Acetylsalicylic acid
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Chemical formula | C9H8O4 |
---|---|
OTP appearance | white solid |
Density(g/cc) | 1.4 |
Melting Point(°C) | 135 |
Boiling Point(°C) | 140 |
Immediate Danger to Life and Health | 150mg/kg |
NFPA 704 |
Acetylsalicylic acid is included in WHO, DHS, and EMS and is used to treat pain, fever, and/or inflammation. Specific inflammatory conditions which aspirin is used to treat include Kawasaki disease, pericarditis, and rheumatic fever. Aspirin given shortly after a heart attack decreases the risk of death. Aspirin is also used long-term to help prevent further heart attacks, ischaemic strokes, and blood clots in people at high risk. It is usually administered orally.[1]
Uses
Primary
- Pharm: Used in the medication aspirin on multiple formularies
Natural Occurrence
- Related compounds occur naturally
Hazards
- 150 mg/kg of body mass is toxic.
- 500 mg/kg is deadly
Production
Synthesis
From methyl salicylate
- React Methyl salicylate with sodium hydroxide giving sodium salicylate, methanol and water.
- C8H8O3 + NaOH → NaC7H5O3 + CH3OH
- React sodium salicylate with acetyl chloride producing acetysalicylic acid and salt
- NaC7H5O3 + C2H3OCl → C9H8O4 + NaCl
The aspirin can be separated by precipitating it, since salt is 100x more soluble in water. (359g/L vs 3g/L)
From salicylic acid
via acetic acid
- React salicylic acid with a large excess of dry acetic acid in the presence of a dehydrating agent, such as sulfuric acid, giving acetylsalicylic acid and acetic acid.
- C6H4(OH)COOH + CH3COOH{H2SO4C9H8O4 + H2O50-70°C}→
- C6H4(OH)COOH + CH3COOH
- Add cold water and place in an ice bath to crystallize the acetylsalicylic acid
- Filter
- Retain residue (acetylsalicylic acid)
- Retain filtrate for other batches (recycle mother liquor)
via acetic anhydride
- React salicylic acid with acetic anhydride, giving acetylsalicylic acid and acetic acid. Small amounts of sulfuric acid (and occasionally phosphoric acid) are often used as a catalyst.
- C6H4(OH)COOH + (CH3CO)2O{H2SO4C9H8O4 + CH3COOH}→
- C6H4(OH)COOH + (CH3CO)2O
Purification
- Dissolve in minimal hot ethanol
- Add 3-4 volumes of cold water
- Filter, discard filtrate
Testing
- Melting point
- For the FeCl3 test, the samples do not have to be dry. To do the test, get 4 test tubes. Place 1 mL of ethanol and 2 drops of FeCl3 solution in each tube. Add a few crystals of salicylic acid to one test tube. Add a few crystals of your crude aspirin product to the second tube. In the third tube, place a few crystals of the recrystallized aspirin. Don’t add anything else to the fourth tube – it will be your control. Shake each of the tubes and record your observations.
Storage
Disposal
See Also
References
- ↑ Wikipedia page