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{{Chembox new| Name = Acetic acid (glacial)| ImageFile = Acetic-acid-2D-skeletal.svg| ImageFile1 = Acetic-acid-3D-balls.png| IUPACName = Acetic acid; Ethanoic acid| OtherNames = Methanecarboxylic acid; acetyl hydroxide (AcOH); hydrogen acetate (HAc)| Section1 = {{Chembox Identifiers| CASNo = 64-19-7| PubChem = 176| InChI=1/C2H4O2/c1-2(3)4/h1H3,(H,3,4)/f/h3H -->
| Section2 = {{Chembox Properties| Formula = CH3COOH| MolarMass = 60.05 g/mol| Appearance = Colourless liquid or crystals| Density = 1.049 g cm−3, liquid; 1.266 g cm−3, solid| Solubility = Fully miscible| MeltingPt = 16.5 °C (289.6 ± 0.5 K) (61.6 °F)http://webbook.nist.gov/cgi/cbook.cgi?ID=C64197&Units=SI&Mask=4#Thermo-Phase| BoilingPt = 118.1 °C (391.2 ± 0.6 K) (244.5 °F)| pKa = 4.76 at 25 °C| Viscosity = 1.22
pascal second at 25 °C -->
| Section3 = {{Chembox Structure| Dipole = 1.74
Debye (gas) -->
| Section7 = {{Chembox Hazards| ExternalMSDS = | Acetic acid (data page)#Material Safety Data Sheet| NFPA-H = 2| NFPA-F = 2| NFPA-R = 2| FlashPt = 43 °C| RPhrases = , | SPhrases = , , , -->
| Section8 = {{Chembox Related| Function =
carboxylic acid| OtherFunctn = Formic acid; Propionic acid; Butyric acid; [ethyl acetate; acetyl chloride; acetic anhydride;
acetonitrile;
acetaldehyde; ethanol;
thioacetic acid;
acetylcholine; acetylcholinesterase-->-->
Acetic acid, also known as
ethanoic acid, is an organic compound chemical compound best recognized for giving
vinegar its sour taste and pungent smell. Its chemical formula is represented as CH3COOH. Pure, water-free acetic acid (
glacial acetic acid) is a colourless
liquid that attracts water from the environment (
hygroscopy), and freezes below 16.7
degree Celsius (62
Fahrenheit) to a colourless crystalline solid. Acetic acid is
corrosion, and its vapour causes irritation to the eyes, a dry and burning nose, sore throat and congestion to the lungs. It is considered a
weak acid due to the fact that at standard temperature and pressure the
dissociation (chemistry) acid exists in equilibrium with the undissociated form in
aqueous solutions, in contrast to strong acids, which are fully dissociated.
Acetic acid is one of the simplest carboxylic acids (the second-simplest, next to formic acid). It is an important reagent and industrial chemical that is used in the production of polyethylene terephthalate mainly used in soft drink bottles; cellulose acetate, mainly for photographic film; and
polyvinyl acetate for wood
Adhesive, as well as many synthetic fibres and fabrics. In households diluted acetic acid is often used in descaling agents. In the food industry acetic acid is used under the
E number E260 as an acidity regulator.
The global demand of acetic acid is around 6.5 million tonnes per year (Mt/a), of which approximately 1.5 Mt/a is met by recycling; the remainder is manufactured from Petrochemistry feedstocks or from biological sources.
Nomenclature
The
trivial name acetic acid is the most commonly used and officially preferred name by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. This name derives from
acetum, the Latin word for vinegar. The synonym
ethanoic acid is a systematic name that is sometimes used in introductions to
organic nomenclature.
Glacial acetic acid is a trivial name for water-free acetic acid. Similar to the
German language name
Eisessig (literally, ice-vinegar), the name comes from the ice-like crystals that form slightly below room temperature at 16.7 °C (about 62 °F).
The most common and official abbreviation for acetic acid is
AcOH or
HOAc where
Ac stands for the
acetyl functional group CH3−C(=O)−;. In the context of acid-base reactions the abbreviation
HAc is often used where
Ac instead stands for the acetate
anion (CH3COO−), although this use is regarded by many as misleading. In either case, the
Ac is not to be confused with the abbreviation for the
chemical element actinium.
Acetic acid has the
Chemical formula#Empirical formula CH2O and the molecular formula C2H4O2 or HC2H3O2(to emphasize the role of the 'active' hydrogen in forming the salt sodium acetate).. F. Michael Akeroyd (1993). "Laudan's Problem Solving Model". The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 44, No. 4. pp. 785-788. To better reflect its structure, acetic acid is often written as CH3-COOH, CH3COOH, or CH3CO2H. The ion resulting from loss of
proton from acetic acid is the
acetate anion. The name
acetate can also refer to a
salt containing this anion, or an
ester of acetic acid.
History
Vinegar is at least as old as civilization. Acetic acid-producing bacteria are present throughout the world, and any culture practicing the
brewing of beer or wine inevitably discovered vinegar as the natural result of their exposure to air.
The use of acetic acid in
alchemy extends into antiquity. In the 3rd century BC, the
Greece philosopher
Theophrastos described how vinegar acted on metals to produce
pigments useful in art, including
white lead (lead carbonate) and
verdigris, a green mixture of
copper salts including copper(II) acetate. Ancient
Rome boiled soured wine in lead pots to produce a highly sweet syrup called
sapa. Sapa was rich in
lead acetate, a sweet substance also called
sugar of lead or
sugar of Saturn (mythology), which contributed to
lead poisoning among the Roman aristocracy.
In the 8th century, the
Alchemy (Islam) Geber was the first to concentrate acetic acid from vinegar through
distillation. In the
Renaissance, glacial acetic acid was prepared through the
dry distillation of metal acetates. The 16th century
Germany alchemist
Andreas Libavius described such a procedure, and he compared the glacial acetic acid produced by this means to vinegar. The presence of water in vinegar has such a profound effect on acetic acid's properties that for centuries many chemists believed that glacial acetic acid and the acid found in vinegar were two different substances. The French chemist
Pierre Adet proved them to be identical.
In 1847 the German chemist
Hermann Kolbe Chemical synthesis acetic acid from inorganic chemistry materials for the first time. This reaction sequence consisted of
chlorination of
carbon disulfide to
carbon tetrachloride, followed by
pyrolysis to
tetrachloroethylene and aqueous chlorination to trichloroacetic acid, and concluded with electrolysis
organic reduction to acetic acid. Goldwhite, Harold (2003).
New Haven Sect. Bull. Am. Chem. Soc. (September 2003).By 1910 most glacial acetic acid was obtained from the "pyroligneous liquor" from distillation of wood. The acetic acid was isolated from this by treatment with calcium hydroxide, and the resultant calcium acetate was then acidified with
sulfuric acid to recover acetic acid. At this time Germany was producing 10,000 tons of glacial acetic acid, around 30% of which was used for the manufacture of indigo dye.Martin, Geoffrey (1917).
Industrial and Manufacturing Chemistry, Part 1, Organic. London: Crosby Lockwood, pp. 330–31.Schweppe, Helmut (1979). "Identification of dyes on old textiles".
J. Am. Inst. Conservation 19(1/3), 14–23.
Chemical properties
Acidity
The hydrogen (H) atom in the carboxyl group (−COOH) in
carboxylic acids such as acetic acid can be given off as an H+ ion (proton), giving them their acidic character. Acetic acid is a weak, effectively
monoprotic acid in aqueous solution, with a Acid dissociation constant value of 4.8. Its conjugate base is acetate (CH3COO−). A 1.0 Molarity solution (about the concentration of domestic vinegar) has a pH of 2.4, indicating that merely 0.4% of the acetic acid molecules are dissociated.
Cyclic dimer
The crystal structure of acetic acidJones, R.E.; Templeton, D.H. (1958). "The crystal structure of acetic acid".
Acta Crystallogr. 11(7), 484–87. shows that the molecules pair up into
dimers connected by hydrogen bonds. The dimers can also be detected in the vapour at 120 °C. They also occur in the liquid phase in dilute solutions in non-hydrogen-bonding solvents, and to some extent in pure acetic acid,James M. Briggs; Toan B. Nguyen; William L. Jorgensen. Monte Carlo simulations of liquid acetic acid and methyl acetate with the OPLS potential functions.
J. Phys. Chem. 1991,
95, 3315–3322. but are disrupted by hydrogen-bonding solvents. The dissociation enthalpy of the dimer is estimated at 65.0–66.0 kJ/mol, and the dissociation entropy at 154–157 J mol–1 K–1.James B. Togeas. Acetic Acid Vapor: 2. A Statistical Mechanical Critique of Vapor Density Experiments.
J. Phys. Chem. A 2005,
109, 5438–5444. This dimerisation behaviour is shared by other lower carboxylic acids.
Solvent
Liquid acetic acid is a
hydrophilicity (
Polar molecule)
protic solvent, similar to ethanol and
water. With a moderate dielectric constant of 6.2, it can dissolve not only polar compounds such as inorganic salts and
sugars, but also non-polar compounds such as oils and chemical elements such as
sulfur and iodine. It readily mixes with many other polar and non-polar solvents such as water, chloroform, and
hexane. This dissolving property and
miscibility of acetic acid makes it a widely used industrial chemical.
Chemical reactions
Acetic acid is corrosion to many metals including
iron,
magnesium, and zinc, forming
hydrogen gas and metal salts called
acetates.
Aluminium, when exposed to oxygen, forms a thin layer of aluminium oxide on its surface which is relatively resistant, so that aluminium tanks can be used to transport acetic acid. Metal acetates can also be prepared from acetic acid and an appropriate
Base (chemistry), as in the popular "Sodium bicarbonate + vinegar" reaction. With the notable exception of chromium(II) acetate, almost all acetates are soluble in water.
Magnesium(
Solid) + 2 CH3COOH(Aqueous) → (CH3COO)2Mg(aq) + Hydrogen(
Gas)
Sodium bicarbonate(s) + CH3COOH(aq) → Sodium acetate(aq) + Carbon dioxide(g) + Water (molecule)(
Liquid)
Acetic acid undergoes the typical
chemical reactions of a
carboxylic acid, such producing water and a metal ethanoate when reacting with alkalis, producing a metal ethanoate when reacted with a metal, and producing a metal ethanoate, water and carbon dioxide when reacting with
carbonates and hydrogencarbonates. Most notable of all its reactions is the formation of
ethanol by reduction, and formation of derivatives such as acetyl chloride via nucleophilic acyl substitution. Other substitution derivatives include
acetic anhydride; this anhydride is produced by
Condensation reaction from two molecules of acetic acid. Esters of acetic acid can likewise be formed via Fischer esterification, and
amides can also be formed. When heated above 440 °C, acetic acid decomposes to produce carbon dioxide and
methane, or to produce ketene and water.
Detection
Acetic acid can be detected by its characteristic smell. A
colour reaction for salts of acetic acid is
iron(III) chloride solution, which results in a deeply red colour that disappears after acidification. Acetates when heated with
arsenic trioxide form
cacodyl oxide, which can be detected by its
odour vapours.
Biochemistry
The
acetyl functional group, derived from acetic acid, is fundamental to the biochemistry of virtually all forms of life. When bound to
coenzyme A it is central to the
metabolism of
carbohydrates and
fats. However, the concentration of free acetic acid in cells is kept at a low level to avoid disrupting the control of the
pH of the cell contents. Unlike some longer-chain carboxylic acids (the
fatty acids), acetic acid does not occur in natural
triglycerides. However, the artificial triglyceride triacetin (glycerin triacetate) is a common food additive, and is found in cosmetics and topical medicines.
Acetic acid is produced and
Excretion by certain Bacterium, notably the
Acetobacter genus and
Clostridium acetobutylicum. These bacteria are found universally in foodstuffs,
water, and
soil, and acetic acid is produced naturally as fruits and some other foods spoil. Acetic acid is also a component of the
vaginal lubrication of
Homo sapiens sapiens and other primates, where it appears to serve as a mild
antibacterial agent.
Dictionary of Organic Compounds (6th Edn.), Vol. 1 (1996). London: Chapman & Hall. ISBN 0-412-54090-8
Production
Acetic acid is produced both synthetically and by bacterial fermentation (biochemistry). Today, the biological route accounts for only about 10% of world production, but it remains important for vinegar production, as many of the world food purity laws stipulate that vinegar used in foods must be of biological origin. About 75% of acetic acid made for use in the chemical industry is made by methanol carbonylation, explained below. Alternative methods account for the rest.Yoneda, Noriyki; Kusano, Satoru; Yasui, Makoto; Pujado, Peter; Wilcher, Steve (2001).
Appl. Catal. A: Gen. 221, 253–265.
Total worldwide production of virgin acetic acid is estimated at 5 Mt/a (million tonnes per year), approximately half of which is produced in the United States. European production stands at approximately 1 Mt/a and is declining, and 0.7 Mt/a is produced in
Japan. Another 1.5 Mt are recycled each year, bringing the total world market to 6.5 Mt/a."Production report".
Chem. Eng. News (July 11, 2005), 67–76.Suresh, Bala (2003). "Acetic Acid". CEH Report 602.5000, SRI International. The two biggest producers of virgin acetic acid are Celanese and
BP. Other major producers include Millennium Chemicals, Sterling Chemicals,
Samsung, Eastman, and
Svensk Etanolkemi.
Methanol carbonylation
Most virgin acetic acid is produced by methanol carbonylation. In this process, methanol and carbon monoxide react to produce acetic acid according to the chemical equation:
methanol + carbon monoxide → CH3COOH
The process involves
iodomethane as an intermediate, and occurs in three steps. A catalyst, usually a metal
Complex (chemistry), is needed for the carbonylation (step 2).
(1) CH3OH + Hydrogen iodide →
Iodomethane + H2O
(2) CH3I +
carbon monoxide → CH3COI
(3) CH3COI + H2O → CH3COOH + HI
By altering the process conditions,
acetic anhydride may also be produced on the same plant. Because both methanol and carbon monoxide are commodity raw materials, methanol carbonylation long appeared to be an attractive method for acetic acid production. Henry Drefyus at Celanese developed a methanol carbonylation pilot plant as early as 1925.Wagner, Frank S. (1978) "Acetic acid." In: Grayson, Martin (Ed.)
Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 3rd edition, New York: John Wiley & Sons. However, a lack of practical materials that could contain the corrosive reaction mixture at the high
pressures needed (200
Atmosphere (unit) or more) discouraged commercialisation of these routes for some time. The first commercial methanol carbonylation process, which used a cobalt catalyst, was developed by German chemical company BASF in 1963. In 1968, a rhodium-based catalyst (
cis−−) was discovered that could operate efficiently at lower pressure with almost no by-products. The first plant using this catalyst was built by US chemical companyMonsanto in 1970, and rhodium-catalysed methanol carbonylation became the dominant method of acetic acid production (see
Monsanto process). In the late 1990s, the chemicals company
BP commercialised the Cativa process catalyst (−), which is promoted by
ruthenium. This iridium-catalysed process is Green chemistry and more efficientLancaster, Mike (2002)
Green Chemistry, an Introductory Text, Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry, pp. 262–266. ISBN 0-85404-620-8. and has largely supplanted the Monsanto process, often in the same production plants.
Acetaldehyde oxidation
Prior to the commercialisation of the Monsanto process, most acetic acid was produced by oxidation of acetaldehyde. This remains the second most important manufacturing method, although it is uncompetitive with methanol carbonylation. The acetaldehyde may be produced via oxidation of butane or light naphtha, or by hydration of ethylene.
When butane or light naphtha is heated with air in the presence of various metal
ions, including those of manganese, cobalt and chromium; organic peroxides form and then decompose to produce acetic acid according to the
chemical equation
2
butane + 5 oxygen → 4 CH3COOH + 2 water
Typically, the reaction is run at a combination of temperature and pressure designed to be as hot as possible while still keeping the butane a liquid. Typical reaction conditions are 150 °C and 55 atm. Several side products may also form, including butanone,
ethyl acetate, formic acid, and propionic acid. These side products are also commercially valuable, and the reaction conditions may be altered to produce more of them if this is economically useful. However, the separation of acetic acid from these by-products adds to the cost of the process.
Under similar conditions and using similar catalysts as are used for butane oxidation, acetaldehyde can be oxidised by the
oxygen in
Earth's atmosphere to produce acetic acid
2
acetaldehyde +
oxygen → 2 CH3COOH
Using modern catalysts, this reaction can have an acetic acid yield greater than 95%. The major side products are ethyl acetate, formic acid, and
formaldehyde, all of which have lower
boiling points than acetic acid and are readily separated by distillation.
Ethylene oxidation
Acetaldehyde may be prepared from
ethylene via the
Wacker process, and then oxidised as above. More recently a cheaper single-stage conversion of ethylene to acetic acid was commercialised by chemical company
Showa Denko, which opened an ethylene oxidation plant in
Ōita Prefecture,
Japan, in 1997.Sano, Ken-ichi; Uchida, Hiroshi; Wakabayashi, Syoichirou (1999).
Catalyst Surveys from Japan 3, 55–60. The process is catalysed by a palladium metal catalyst supported on a
heteropoly acid such as tungstosilicic acid. It is thought to be competitive with methanol carbonylation for smaller plants (100–250 kt/a), depending on the local price of ethylene.
Fermentation
Oxidative fermentation
For most of human history, acetic acid, in the form of vinegar, has been made by bacteria of the genus
Acetobacter. Given sufficient oxygen, these bacteria can produce vinegar from a variety of alcoholic foodstuffs. Commonly used feeds include Cider,
wine, and fermented cereal,
malt,
rice, or
potato mashes. The overall chemical reaction facilitated by these bacteria is:
ethanol + oxygen → CH3COOH +
water
A dilute alcohol solution inoculated with
Acetobacter and kept in a warm, airy place will become vinegar over the course of a few months. Industrial vinegar-making methods accelerate this process by improving the supply of oxygen to the bacteria.
The first batches of vinegar produced by fermentation probably followed errors in the winemaking process. If
must is fermented at too high a temperature, acetobacter will overwhelm the
yeast naturally occurring on the
grapes. As the demand for vinegar for culinary, medical, and sanitary purposes increased, vintners quickly learned to use other organic materials to produce vinegar in the hot summer months before the grapes were ripe and ready for processing into wine. This method was slow, however, and not always successful, as the vintners did not understand the process.
One of the first modern commercial processes was the "fast method" or "German method", first practised in Germany in 1823. In this process, fermentation takes place in a tower packed with wood shavings or
charcoal. The alcohol-containing feed is trickled into the top of the tower, and fresh Earth's atmosphere supplied from the bottom by either natural or forced convection. The improved air supply in this process cut the time to prepare vinegar from months to weeks.
Most vinegar today is made in submerged tank
Microbiological culture, first described in 1949 by Otto Hromatka and Heinrich Ebner. In this method, alcohol is fermented to vinegar in a continuously stirred tank, and oxygen is supplied by bubbling air through the solution. Using modern applications of this method, vinegar of 15% acetic acid can be prepared in only 24 hours in batch process, even 20% in 60 h fed-batch process.
Anaerobic fermentation
Some species of
anaerobic bacteria, including several members of the genus
Clostridium, can convert sugars to acetic acid directly, without using ethanol as an intermediate. The overall chemical reaction conducted by these bacteria may be represented as:
glucose → 3 CH3COOH
More interestingly from the point of view of an industrial chemist, many of these Acetogen can produce acetic acid from one-carbon compounds, including
methanol,
carbon monoxide, or a mixture of
carbon dioxide and
hydrogen:
2
carbon dioxide + 4 hydrogen → CH3COOH + 2 water
This ability of
Clostridium to utilize sugars directly, or to produce acetic acid from less costly inputs, means that these bacteria could potentially produce acetic acid more efficiently than ethanol-oxidisers like
Acetobacter. However,
Clostridium bacteria are less acid-tolerant than
Acetobacter. Even the most acid-tolerant
Clostridium strains can produce vinegar of only a few per cent acetic acid, compared to some
Acetobacter strains that can produce vinegar of up to 20% acetic acid. At present, it remains more cost-effective to produce vinegar using
Acetobacter than to produce it using
Clostridium and then concentrating it. As a result, although acetogenic bacteria have been known since 1940, their industrial use remains confined to a few niche applications.
Applications
bottle of acetic acid in a laboratory.
Acetic acid is a chemical
reagent for the production of many chemical compounds. The largest single use of acetic acid is in the production of vinyl acetate monomer, closely followed by acetic anhydride and ester production. The volume of acetic acid used in vinegar is comparatively small.
Vinyl acetate monomer
The major use of acetic acid is for the production of
vinyl acetate. This application consumes approximately 40% to 45% of the world's production of acetic acid. The reaction is of ethylene and acetic acid with
oxygen over a palladium catalyst.
2 H3C-COOH + 2 ethylene + Oxygen → 2 vinyl acetate + 2
Water (molecule)
Vinyl acetate can be polymerised to
polyvinyl acetate or to other polymers, which are applied in
paints and
adhesives.
Ester production
The major esters of acetic acid are commonly used solvents for inks,
paints and
coatings. The esters include ethyl acetate, n-
butyl acetate,
isobutyl acetate, and propyl acetate. They are typically produced by
catalyst reaction from acetic acid and the corresponding alcohol.
H3C-COOH + Alcohol →
Ester + water, where R = a general
alkyl group
Most acetate esters, however, are produced from
acetaldehyde using the Tishchenko reaction. Additionally, some ether acetates are used as solvents for
nitrocellulose, Acrylic paint, varnish removers and wood stains. First glycol monoethers are produced from
ethylene oxide or propylene oxide with alcohol, which are then esterified with acetic acid. The three major products are ethylene glycol monoethyl ether acetate (EEA), ethylene glycol monobutyl ether acetate (EBA), and propylene glycol monomethyl ether acetate (PMA). This application consumes about 15% to 20% of worldwide acetic acid. Some of these ether acetates, for example EEA, have been shown to be harmful to human reproduction.
Acetic anhydride
The condensation reaction product of two molecules of acetic acid is
acetic anhydride. The worldwide production of acetic anhydride is a major application, and uses approximately 25% to 30% of the global production of acetic acid. Acetic anhydride may be produced directly by #Methanol carbonylation bypassing the acid, and
Cativa process plants can be adapted for anhydride production.
Acetic anhydride is a strong acetylation agent. As such, its major application is for cellulose acetate, a synthetic
textile also used for
photographic film. Acetic anhydride is also a reagent for the production of aspirin, heroin, and other compounds.
Vinegar
In the form of
vinegar, acetic acid solutions (typically 5% to 18% acetic acid, with the percentage usually calculated by mass) are used directly as a
condiment, and also in the pickling of vegetables and other foodstuffs. Table vinegar tends to be more diluted (5% to 8% acetic acid), while commercial food pickling generally employs more concentrated solutions. The amount of acetic acid used as vinegar on a worldwide scale is not large, but historically, this is by far the oldest and most well-known application.
Use as solvent
Glacial acetic acid is an excellent polar
protic solvent, as noted
Acetic acid#Chemical properties. It is frequently used as a solvent for
recrystallisation to purify organic compounds. Pure molten acetic acid is used as a solvent in the production of
terephthalic acid (TPA), the raw material for
polyethylene terephthalate (PET). Although currently accounting for 5%–10% of acetic acid use worldwide, this specific application is expected to grow significantly in the next decade, as PET production increases.
Acetic acid is often used as a solvent for reactions involving
carbocations, such as Friedel-Crafts#Friedel-Crafts alkylation. For example, one stage in the commercial manufacture of synthetic
camphor involves a
Wagner-Meerwein rearrangement of camphene to isobornyl acetate; here acetic acid acts both as a solvent and as a
nucleophile to trap the
rearrangement reaction carbocation. Acetic acid is the solvent of choice when redox an aryl nitro-group to an aniline using palladium-on-carbon.
Glacial acetic acid is used in analytical chemistry for the estimation of weakly alkaline substances such as organic amides. Glacial acetic acid is a much weaker base (chemistry) than water, so the amide behaves as a strong base in this medium. It then can be titrated using a solution in glacial acetic acid of a very strong acid, such as
perchloric acid.
Other applications
Dilute solutions of acetic acids are also used for their mild acidity. Examples in the
household environment include the use in a stop bath during the development of photographic films, and in descaling agents to remove limescale from taps and kettles. The acidity is also used for treating the sting of the box jellyfish by disabling the stinging cells of the jellyfish, preventing serious injury or death if applied immediately, and for treating otitis externas in people in preparations such as Vosol. Equivalently, acetic acid is used as a spray-on
preservative for livestock
silage, to discourage bacterial and
fungus growth. Glacial acetic acid is also used as a
wart and
verruca remover.
Several organic or inorganic salts are produced from acetic acid, including:
Substituted acetic acids produced include:
- Monochloroacetic acid (MCA), dichloroacetic acid (considered a by-product), and trichloroacetic acid. MCA is used in the manufacture of indigo dye.
- Bromoacetic acid, which is esterified to produce the reagent ethyl bromoacetate.
- Trifluoroacetic acid, which is a common reagent in organic synthesis.
Amounts of acetic acid used in these other applications together (apart from TPA) account for another 5%–10% of acetic acid use worldwide. These applications are, however, not expected to grow as much as TPA production.
Safety
Concentrated acetic acid is corrosion and must therefore be handled with appropriate care, since it can cause skin burns, permanent eye damage, and irritation to the mucous membranes. These burns or blisters may not appear until several hours after exposure.
Latex gloves offer no protection, so specially resistant gloves, such as those made of nitrile rubber, should be worn when handling the compound. Concentrated acetic acid can be ignited with some difficulty in the laboratory. It becomes a flammable risk if the ambient temperature exceeds 39 °C (102 °F), and can form explosive mixtures with air above this temperature (
explosive limits: 5.4%–16%).
The hazards of solutions of acetic acid depend on the concentration. The following table lists the
Directive 67/548/EEC of acetic acid solutions:
{| class="wikitable"|-! Concentrationby weight! Molarity! Classification! List of R-phrases|-| 10%–25%| 1.67–4.16 mol/L| Irritant (
Xi)| |-| 25%–90%| 4.16–14.99 mol/L| Corrosive (
C)| |-| >90%| >14.99 mol/L| Corrosive (
C)| , |-|}
Solutions at more than 25% acetic acid are handled in a fume hood because of the pungent, corrosive vapour. Dilute acetic acid, in the form of vinegar, is harmless. However, ingestion of stronger solutions is dangerous to human and animal life. It can cause severe damage to the
digestive system, and a potentially lethal change in the acidity of the blood.
Due to incompatibilities, it is recommended to keep acetic acid away from chromic acid, ethylene glycol,
nitric acid, perchloric acid,
permanganates,
peroxides and
hydroxyls.
See also
Uses
- Vinegar
- Pickling, a food preservation method
- Acetic acid bacteria, produce vinegar from alcoholic solutions
- Acetic acid (data page)
- Acetobacter, an important genus of acetic acid bacteria
- Descaling agent, often contains acetic acid
Chemistry
- Common chemicals, where to purchase common chemicals used in experiments
- Carboxylic acid, compounds containing the -COOH group
- Fatty acid, straight-chain carboxylic acids
- Acetate anion, CH3COO−, abbreviated AcO−
- Acetyl group, the CH3-CO– group, abbreviated Ac
- Coenzyme A, an important acetyl-carrier in cells
Related chemicals
- Formic acid, the carboxylic acid with one carbon atom fewer per molecule
- Propionic acid, the carboxylic acid with one carbon atom more per molecule
- Ethanol, ethyl alcohol
- Acetaldehyde
- Acetic anhydride
- Ethyl acetate, an important solvent
- Monochloroacetic acid
- Chloroacetic acids
References
External links
-
- Computational Chemistry Wiki
-
- Acetic acid MSDS (Material Safety Data Sheet)
- National Pollutant Inventory - Acetic acid fact sheet
- NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards
- 29 CFR 1910.1000, Table Z-1 (US Permissible exposure limits)
- Occupational Training NFPA tables
- Celanese, major acetic acid producer
- Usage of acetic acid in Organic Syntheses
- Acetic acid pH and titration - freeware for data analysis, simulation and distribution diagram generation
- Carl Edwin Lindgren (July, 1991). Irritated Over Darkroom Chemicals - Acrid Fumes can be Dangerous. PSA Journal, Vol. 57, No. 7, 13.
{{Chembox new| Name = Acetic acid (glacial)| ImageFile = Acetic-acid-2D-skeletal.svg| ImageFile1 = Acetic-acid-3D-balls.png| IUPACName = Acetic acid; Ethanoic acid| OtherNames = Methanecarboxylic acid; acetyl hydroxide (AcOH); hydrogen acetate (HAc)| Section1 = {{Chembox Identifiers| CASNo = 64-19-7| PubChem = 176| InChI=1/C2H4O2/c1-2(3)4/h1H3,(H,3,4)/f/h3H -->
| Section2 = {{Chembox Properties| Formula = CH3COOH| MolarMass = 60.05 g/mol| Appearance = Colourless liquid or crystals| Density = 1.049 g cm−3, liquid; 1.266 g cm−3, solid| Solubility = Fully miscible| MeltingPt = 16.5 °C (289.6 ± 0.5 K) (61.6 °F)http://webbook.nist.gov/cgi/cbook.cgi?ID=C64197&Units=SI&Mask=4#Thermo-Phase| BoilingPt = 118.1 °C (391.2 ± 0.6 K) (244.5 °F)| pKa = 4.76 at 25 °C| Viscosity = 1.22
pascal second at 25 °C -->
| Section3 = {{Chembox Structure| Dipole = 1.74
Debye (gas) -->
| Section7 = {{Chembox Hazards| ExternalMSDS = | Acetic acid (data page)#Material Safety Data Sheet| NFPA-H = 2| NFPA-F = 2| NFPA-R = 2| FlashPt = 43 °C| RPhrases = , | SPhrases = , , , -->
| Section8 = {{Chembox Related| Function =
carboxylic acid| OtherFunctn =
Formic acid; Propionic acid; Butyric acid; [ethyl acetate; acetyl chloride;
acetic anhydride; acetonitrile;
acetaldehyde;
ethanol;
thioacetic acid;
acetylcholine; acetylcholinesterase-->-->
Acetic acid, also known as
ethanoic acid, is an
organic compound chemical compound best recognized for giving vinegar its sour taste and pungent smell. Its
chemical formula is represented as CH3COOH. Pure, water-free acetic acid (
glacial acetic acid) is a colourless liquid that attracts water from the environment (
hygroscopy), and freezes below 16.7
degree Celsius (62Fahrenheit) to a colourless
crystalline
solid. Acetic acid is corrosion, and its vapour causes irritation to the eyes, a dry and burning nose, sore throat and congestion to the lungs. It is considered a
weak acid due to the fact that at standard temperature and pressure the dissociation (chemistry) acid exists in equilibrium with the undissociated form in
aqueous solutions, in contrast to strong acids, which are fully dissociated.
Acetic acid is one of the simplest
carboxylic acids (the second-simplest, next to formic acid). It is an important
reagent and industrial chemical that is used in the production of
polyethylene terephthalate mainly used in soft drink bottles;
cellulose acetate, mainly for photographic film; and
polyvinyl acetate for wood
Adhesive, as well as many synthetic fibres and fabrics. In households diluted acetic acid is often used in
descaling agents. In the
food industry acetic acid is used under the E number E260 as an acidity regulator.
The global demand of acetic acid is around 6.5 million tonnes per year (Mt/a), of which approximately 1.5 Mt/a is met by recycling; the remainder is manufactured from
Petrochemistry feedstocks or from biological sources.
Nomenclature
The
trivial name acetic acid is the most commonly used and officially preferred name by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. This name derives from
acetum, the
Latin word for vinegar. The synonym
ethanoic acid is a systematic name that is sometimes used in introductions to
organic nomenclature.
Glacial acetic acid is a trivial name for water-free acetic acid. Similar to the
German language name
Eisessig (literally, ice-vinegar), the name comes from the ice-like crystals that form slightly below room temperature at 16.7 °C (about 62 °F).
The most common and official abbreviation for acetic acid is
AcOH or
HOAc where
Ac stands for the acetyl functional group CH3−C(=O)−;. In the context of
acid-base reactions the abbreviation
HAc is often used where
Ac instead stands for the
acetate anion (CH3COO−), although this use is regarded by many as misleading. In either case, the
Ac is not to be confused with the abbreviation for the chemical element
actinium.
Acetic acid has the
Chemical formula#Empirical formula CH2O and the molecular formula C2H4O2 or HC2H3O2(to emphasize the role of the 'active' hydrogen in forming the salt sodium acetate).. F. Michael Akeroyd (1993). "Laudan's Problem Solving Model". The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 44, No. 4. pp. 785-788. To better reflect its structure, acetic acid is often written as CH3-COOH, CH3COOH, or CH3CO2H. The ion resulting from loss of
proton from acetic acid is the
acetate anion. The name
acetate can also refer to a salt containing this anion, or an
ester of acetic acid.
History
Vinegar is at least as old as civilization. Acetic acid-producing bacteria are present throughout the world, and any culture practicing the brewing of
beer or
wine inevitably discovered vinegar as the natural result of their exposure to air.
The use of acetic acid in alchemy extends into antiquity. In the 3rd century BC, the Greece philosopher Theophrastos described how vinegar acted on metals to produce
pigments useful in art, including
white lead (lead carbonate) and
verdigris, a green mixture of
copper salts including copper(II) acetate. Ancient Rome boiled soured wine in lead pots to produce a highly sweet syrup called
sapa. Sapa was rich in lead acetate, a sweet substance also called
sugar of lead or
sugar of Saturn (mythology), which contributed to
lead poisoning among the Roman aristocracy.
In the 8th century, the Alchemy (Islam)
Geber was the first to concentrate acetic acid from vinegar through distillation. In the
Renaissance, glacial acetic acid was prepared through the
dry distillation of metal acetates. The 16th century
Germany alchemist Andreas Libavius described such a procedure, and he compared the glacial acetic acid produced by this means to vinegar. The presence of water in vinegar has such a profound effect on acetic acid's properties that for centuries many chemists believed that glacial acetic acid and the acid found in vinegar were two different substances. The French chemist Pierre Adet proved them to be identical.
In 1847 the German chemist Hermann Kolbe
Chemical synthesis acetic acid from inorganic chemistry materials for the first time. This reaction sequence consisted of chlorination of
carbon disulfide to
carbon tetrachloride, followed by pyrolysis to
tetrachloroethylene and aqueous chlorination to
trichloroacetic acid, and concluded with
electrolysis organic reduction to acetic acid. Goldwhite, Harold (2003).
New Haven Sect. Bull. Am. Chem. Soc. (September 2003).By 1910 most glacial acetic acid was obtained from the "pyroligneous liquor" from distillation of wood. The acetic acid was isolated from this by treatment with calcium hydroxide, and the resultant calcium acetate was then acidified with sulfuric acid to recover acetic acid. At this time Germany was producing 10,000
tons of glacial acetic acid, around 30% of which was used for the manufacture of
indigo dye.Martin, Geoffrey (1917).
Industrial and Manufacturing Chemistry, Part 1, Organic. London: Crosby Lockwood, pp. 330–31.Schweppe, Helmut (1979). "Identification of dyes on old textiles".
J. Am. Inst. Conservation 19(1/3), 14–23.
Chemical properties
Acidity
The hydrogen (H) atom in the carboxyl group (−COOH) in
carboxylic acids such as acetic acid can be given off as an H+ ion (
proton), giving them their acidic character. Acetic acid is a weak, effectively
monoprotic acid in aqueous solution, with a Acid dissociation constant value of 4.8. Its
conjugate base is acetate (CH3COO−). A 1.0
Molarity solution (about the concentration of domestic vinegar) has a pH of 2.4, indicating that merely 0.4% of the acetic acid molecules are dissociated.
Cyclic dimer
The crystal structure of acetic acidJones, R.E.; Templeton, D.H. (1958). "The crystal structure of acetic acid".
Acta Crystallogr. 11(7), 484–87. shows that the molecules pair up into
dimers connected by hydrogen bonds. The dimers can also be detected in the vapour at 120 °C. They also occur in the liquid phase in dilute solutions in non-hydrogen-bonding solvents, and to some extent in pure acetic acid,James M. Briggs; Toan B. Nguyen; William L. Jorgensen. Monte Carlo simulations of liquid acetic acid and methyl acetate with the OPLS potential functions.
J. Phys. Chem. 1991,
95, 3315–3322. but are disrupted by hydrogen-bonding solvents. The dissociation enthalpy of the dimer is estimated at 65.0–66.0 kJ/mol, and the dissociation entropy at 154–157 J mol–1 K–1.James B. Togeas. Acetic Acid Vapor: 2. A Statistical Mechanical Critique of Vapor Density Experiments.
J. Phys. Chem. A 2005,
109, 5438–5444. This dimerisation behaviour is shared by other lower carboxylic acids.
Solvent
Liquid acetic acid is a hydrophilicity (Polar molecule) protic solvent, similar to
ethanol and water. With a moderate dielectric constant of 6.2, it can dissolve not only polar compounds such as inorganic salts and sugars, but also non-polar compounds such as oils and chemical elements such as
sulfur and
iodine. It readily mixes with many other polar and non-polar solvents such as water,
chloroform, and
hexane. This dissolving property and miscibility of acetic acid makes it a widely used industrial chemical.
Chemical reactions
Acetic acid is
corrosion to many
metals including
iron, magnesium, and
zinc, forming hydrogen gas and metal salts called acetates.
Aluminium, when exposed to oxygen, forms a thin layer of aluminium oxide on its surface which is relatively resistant, so that aluminium tanks can be used to transport acetic acid. Metal acetates can also be prepared from acetic acid and an appropriate Base (chemistry), as in the popular "Sodium bicarbonate + vinegar" reaction. With the notable exception of chromium(II) acetate, almost all acetates are soluble in water.
Magnesium(
Solid) + 2 CH3COOH(
Aqueous) → (CH3COO)2Mg(aq) + Hydrogen(Gas)
Sodium bicarbonate(s) + CH3COOH(aq) → Sodium acetate(aq) + Carbon dioxide(g) +
Water (molecule)(Liquid)
Acetic acid undergoes the typical
chemical reactions of a carboxylic acid, such producing water and a metal
ethanoate when reacting with
alkalis, producing a metal ethanoate when reacted with a metal, and producing a metal ethanoate,
water and carbon dioxide when reacting with carbonates and
hydrogencarbonates. Most notable of all its reactions is the formation of
ethanol by reduction, and formation of derivatives such as
acetyl chloride via
nucleophilic acyl substitution. Other substitution derivatives include acetic anhydride; this
anhydride is produced by
Condensation reaction from two molecules of acetic acid.
Esters of acetic acid can likewise be formed via Fischer esterification, and
amides can also be formed. When heated above 440 °C, acetic acid decomposes to produce carbon dioxide and
methane, or to produce
ketene and water.
Detection
Acetic acid can be detected by its characteristic smell. A colour reaction for salts of acetic acid is iron(III) chloride solution, which results in a deeply red colour that disappears after acidification. Acetates when heated with
arsenic trioxide form cacodyl oxide, which can be detected by its
odour vapours.
Biochemistry
The
acetyl functional group, derived from acetic acid, is fundamental to the biochemistry of virtually all forms of life. When bound to
coenzyme A it is central to the metabolism of carbohydrates and fats. However, the concentration of free acetic acid in cells is kept at a low level to avoid disrupting the control of the
pH of the cell contents. Unlike some longer-chain carboxylic acids (the
fatty acids), acetic acid does not occur in natural
triglycerides. However, the artificial triglyceride
triacetin (glycerin triacetate) is a common food additive, and is found in cosmetics and topical medicines.
Acetic acid is produced and Excretion by certain
Bacterium, notably the
Acetobacter genus and
Clostridium acetobutylicum. These bacteria are found universally in foodstuffs,
water, and
soil, and acetic acid is produced naturally as fruits and some other foods spoil. Acetic acid is also a component of the
vaginal lubrication of Homo sapiens sapiens and other primates, where it appears to serve as a mild
antibacterial agent.
Dictionary of Organic Compounds (6th Edn.), Vol. 1 (1996). London: Chapman & Hall. ISBN 0-412-54090-8
Production
Acetic acid is produced both synthetically and by bacterial
fermentation (biochemistry). Today, the biological route accounts for only about 10% of world production, but it remains important for vinegar production, as many of the world food purity laws stipulate that vinegar used in foods must be of biological origin. About 75% of acetic acid made for use in the chemical industry is made by methanol carbonylation, explained below. Alternative methods account for the rest.Yoneda, Noriyki; Kusano, Satoru; Yasui, Makoto; Pujado, Peter; Wilcher, Steve (2001).
Appl. Catal. A: Gen. 221, 253–265.
Total worldwide production of virgin acetic acid is estimated at 5 Mt/a (million tonnes per year), approximately half of which is produced in the
United States.
European production stands at approximately 1 Mt/a and is declining, and 0.7 Mt/a is produced in Japan. Another 1.5 Mt are recycled each year, bringing the total world market to 6.5 Mt/a."Production report".
Chem. Eng. News (July 11, 2005), 67–76.Suresh, Bala (2003). "Acetic Acid". CEH Report 602.5000, SRI International. The two biggest producers of virgin acetic acid are
Celanese and BP. Other major producers include Millennium Chemicals, Sterling Chemicals, Samsung, Eastman, and Svensk Etanolkemi.
Methanol carbonylation
Most virgin acetic acid is produced by methanol carbonylation. In this process,
methanol and
carbon monoxide react to produce acetic acid according to the chemical equation:
methanol + carbon monoxide → CH3COOH
The process involves
iodomethane as an intermediate, and occurs in three steps. A catalyst, usually a metal
Complex (chemistry), is needed for the carbonylation (step 2).
(1) CH3OH +
Hydrogen iodide → Iodomethane + H2O
(2) CH3I + carbon monoxide → CH3COI
(3) CH3COI + H2O → CH3COOH + HI
By altering the process conditions,
acetic anhydride may also be produced on the same plant. Because both methanol and carbon monoxide are commodity raw materials, methanol carbonylation long appeared to be an attractive method for acetic acid production. Henry Drefyus at
Celanese developed a methanol carbonylation pilot plant as early as 1925.Wagner, Frank S. (1978) "Acetic acid." In: Grayson, Martin (Ed.)
Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 3rd edition, New York: John Wiley & Sons. However, a lack of practical materials that could contain the corrosive reaction mixture at the high pressures needed (200 Atmosphere (unit) or more) discouraged commercialisation of these routes for some time. The first commercial methanol carbonylation process, which used a cobalt catalyst, was developed by German chemical company BASF in 1963. In 1968, a rhodium-based catalyst (
cis−−) was discovered that could operate efficiently at lower pressure with almost no by-products. The first plant using this catalyst was built by US chemical company
Monsanto in 1970, and rhodium-catalysed methanol carbonylation became the dominant method of acetic acid production (see Monsanto process). In the late 1990s, the chemicals company
BP commercialised the Cativa process catalyst (−), which is promoted by ruthenium. This
iridium-catalysed process is Green chemistry and more efficientLancaster, Mike (2002)
Green Chemistry, an Introductory Text, Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry, pp. 262–266. ISBN 0-85404-620-8. and has largely supplanted the Monsanto process, often in the same production plants.
Acetaldehyde oxidation
Prior to the commercialisation of the Monsanto process, most acetic acid was produced by oxidation of acetaldehyde. This remains the second most important manufacturing method, although it is uncompetitive with methanol carbonylation. The acetaldehyde may be produced via
oxidation of butane or light naphtha, or by hydration of ethylene.
When
butane or light naphtha is heated with air in the presence of various metal ions, including those of
manganese,
cobalt and
chromium; organic peroxides form and then decompose to produce acetic acid according to the chemical equation
2 butane + 5 oxygen → 4 CH3COOH + 2
water
Typically, the reaction is run at a combination of
temperature and pressure designed to be as hot as possible while still keeping the butane a liquid. Typical reaction conditions are 150 °C and 55 atm. Several side products may also form, including butanone,
ethyl acetate,
formic acid, and propionic acid. These side products are also commercially valuable, and the reaction conditions may be altered to produce more of them if this is economically useful. However, the separation of acetic acid from these by-products adds to the cost of the process.
Under similar conditions and using similar catalysts as are used for butane oxidation, acetaldehyde can be oxidised by the oxygen in
Earth's atmosphere to produce acetic acid
2 acetaldehyde +
oxygen → 2 CH3COOH
Using modern catalysts, this reaction can have an acetic acid yield greater than 95%. The major side products are ethyl acetate,
formic acid, and formaldehyde, all of which have lower boiling points than acetic acid and are readily separated by distillation.
Ethylene oxidation
Acetaldehyde may be prepared from
ethylene via the Wacker process, and then oxidised as above. More recently a cheaper single-stage conversion of ethylene to acetic acid was commercialised by chemical company Showa Denko, which opened an ethylene oxidation plant in
Ōita Prefecture, Japan, in 1997.Sano, Ken-ichi; Uchida, Hiroshi; Wakabayashi, Syoichirou (1999).
Catalyst Surveys from Japan 3, 55–60. The process is catalysed by a
palladium metal catalyst supported on a
heteropoly acid such as
tungstosilicic acid. It is thought to be competitive with methanol carbonylation for smaller plants (100–250 kt/a), depending on the local price of ethylene.
Fermentation
Oxidative fermentation
For most of human history, acetic acid, in the form of vinegar, has been made by bacteria of the genus
Acetobacter. Given sufficient oxygen, these bacteria can produce vinegar from a variety of alcoholic foodstuffs. Commonly used feeds include Cider, wine, and fermented cereal,
malt,
rice, or
potato mashes. The overall chemical reaction facilitated by these bacteria is:
ethanol + oxygen → CH3COOH + water
A dilute alcohol solution inoculated with
Acetobacter and kept in a warm, airy place will become vinegar over the course of a few months. Industrial vinegar-making methods accelerate this process by improving the supply of oxygen to the bacteria.
The first batches of vinegar produced by fermentation probably followed errors in the winemaking process. If
must is fermented at too high a temperature, acetobacter will overwhelm the
yeast naturally occurring on the
grapes. As the demand for vinegar for culinary, medical, and sanitary purposes increased, vintners quickly learned to use other organic materials to produce vinegar in the hot summer months before the grapes were ripe and ready for processing into wine. This method was slow, however, and not always successful, as the vintners did not understand the process.
One of the first modern commercial processes was the "fast method" or "German method", first practised in Germany in 1823. In this process, fermentation takes place in a tower packed with wood shavings or charcoal. The alcohol-containing feed is trickled into the top of the tower, and fresh
Earth's atmosphere supplied from the bottom by either natural or forced convection. The improved air supply in this process cut the time to prepare vinegar from months to weeks.
Most vinegar today is made in submerged tank Microbiological culture, first described in 1949 by Otto Hromatka and Heinrich Ebner. In this method, alcohol is fermented to vinegar in a continuously stirred tank, and oxygen is supplied by bubbling air through the solution. Using modern applications of this method, vinegar of 15% acetic acid can be prepared in only 24 hours in batch process, even 20% in 60 h fed-batch process.
Anaerobic fermentation
Some species of
anaerobic bacteria, including several members of the genus
Clostridium, can convert sugars to acetic acid directly, without using ethanol as an intermediate. The overall chemical reaction conducted by these bacteria may be represented as:
glucose → 3 CH3COOH
More interestingly from the point of view of an industrial chemist, many of these
Acetogen can produce acetic acid from one-carbon compounds, including methanol,
carbon monoxide, or a mixture of carbon dioxide and
hydrogen:
2 carbon dioxide + 4
hydrogen → CH3COOH + 2
water
This ability of
Clostridium to utilize sugars directly, or to produce acetic acid from less costly inputs, means that these bacteria could potentially produce acetic acid more efficiently than ethanol-oxidisers like
Acetobacter. However,
Clostridium bacteria are less acid-tolerant than
Acetobacter. Even the most acid-tolerant
Clostridium strains can produce vinegar of only a few per cent acetic acid, compared to some
Acetobacter strains that can produce vinegar of up to 20% acetic acid. At present, it remains more cost-effective to produce vinegar using
Acetobacter than to produce it using
Clostridium and then concentrating it. As a result, although acetogenic bacteria have been known since 1940, their industrial use remains confined to a few niche applications.
Applications
bottle of acetic acid in a laboratory.
Acetic acid is a chemical
reagent for the production of many chemical compounds. The largest single use of acetic acid is in the production of vinyl acetate monomer, closely followed by acetic anhydride and ester production. The volume of acetic acid used in vinegar is comparatively small.
Vinyl acetate monomer
The major use of acetic acid is for the production of
vinyl acetate. This application consumes approximately 40% to 45% of the world's production of acetic acid. The reaction is of
ethylene and acetic acid with
oxygen over a
palladium catalyst.
2 H3C-COOH + 2
ethylene +
Oxygen → 2
vinyl acetate + 2 Water (molecule)
Vinyl acetate can be polymerised to polyvinyl acetate or to other
polymers, which are applied in
paints and
adhesives.
Ester production
The major esters of acetic acid are commonly used solvents for inks,
paints and coatings. The esters include ethyl acetate, n-
butyl acetate,
isobutyl acetate, and
propyl acetate. They are typically produced by catalyst reaction from acetic acid and the corresponding alcohol.
H3C-COOH +
Alcohol →
Ester + water, where R = a general alkyl group
Most acetate esters, however, are produced from
acetaldehyde using the
Tishchenko reaction. Additionally, some ether acetates are used as solvents for
nitrocellulose,
Acrylic paint,
varnish removers and wood stains. First glycol monoethers are produced from
ethylene oxide or
propylene oxide with alcohol, which are then esterified with acetic acid. The three major products are ethylene glycol monoethyl ether acetate (EEA), ethylene glycol monobutyl ether acetate (EBA), and propylene glycol monomethyl ether acetate (PMA). This application consumes about 15% to 20% of worldwide acetic acid. Some of these ether acetates, for example EEA, have been shown to be harmful to human reproduction.
Acetic anhydride
The condensation reaction product of two molecules of acetic acid is acetic anhydride. The worldwide production of acetic anhydride is a major application, and uses approximately 25% to 30% of the global production of acetic acid. Acetic anhydride may be produced directly by #Methanol carbonylation bypassing the acid, and Cativa process plants can be adapted for anhydride production.
Acetic anhydride is a strong acetylation agent. As such, its major application is for cellulose acetate, a synthetic textile also used for
photographic film. Acetic anhydride is also a reagent for the production of aspirin, heroin, and other compounds.
Vinegar
In the form of vinegar, acetic acid solutions (typically 5% to 18% acetic acid, with the percentage usually calculated by mass) are used directly as a condiment, and also in the
pickling of vegetables and other foodstuffs. Table vinegar tends to be more diluted (5% to 8% acetic acid), while commercial food pickling generally employs more concentrated solutions. The amount of acetic acid used as vinegar on a worldwide scale is not large, but historically, this is by far the oldest and most well-known application.
Use as solvent
Glacial acetic acid is an excellent polar
protic solvent, as noted
Acetic acid#Chemical properties. It is frequently used as a solvent for recrystallisation to purify organic compounds. Pure molten acetic acid is used as a
solvent in the production of
terephthalic acid (TPA), the raw material for
polyethylene terephthalate (PET). Although currently accounting for 5%–10% of acetic acid use worldwide, this specific application is expected to grow significantly in the next decade, as PET production increases.
Acetic acid is often used as a solvent for reactions involving carbocations, such as
Friedel-Crafts#Friedel-Crafts alkylation. For example, one stage in the commercial manufacture of synthetic
camphor involves a Wagner-Meerwein rearrangement of camphene to isobornyl acetate; here acetic acid acts both as a solvent and as a
nucleophile to trap the rearrangement reaction carbocation. Acetic acid is the solvent of choice when
redox an aryl nitro-group to an aniline using palladium-on-carbon.
Glacial acetic acid is used in analytical chemistry for the estimation of weakly alkaline substances such as organic amides. Glacial acetic acid is a much weaker base (chemistry) than water, so the amide behaves as a strong base in this medium. It then can be titrated using a solution in glacial acetic acid of a very strong acid, such as
perchloric acid.
Other applications
Dilute solutions of acetic acids are also used for their mild acidity. Examples in the household environment include the use in a
stop bath during the development of photographic films, and in
descaling agents to remove
limescale from taps and kettles. The acidity is also used for treating the sting of the box jellyfish by disabling the stinging cells of the jellyfish, preventing serious injury or death if applied immediately, and for treating
otitis externas in people in preparations such as
Vosol. Equivalently, acetic acid is used as a spray-on preservative for livestock
silage, to discourage bacterial and fungus growth. Glacial acetic acid is also used as a wart and
verruca remover.
Several organic or inorganic salts are produced from acetic acid, including:
Substituted acetic acids produced include:
- Monochloroacetic acid (MCA), dichloroacetic acid (considered a by-product), and trichloroacetic acid. MCA is used in the manufacture of indigo dye.
- Bromoacetic acid, which is esterified to produce the reagent ethyl bromoacetate.
- Trifluoroacetic acid, which is a common reagent in organic synthesis.
Amounts of acetic acid used in these other applications together (apart from TPA) account for another 5%–10% of acetic acid use worldwide. These applications are, however, not expected to grow as much as TPA production.
Safety
Concentrated acetic acid is
corrosion and must therefore be handled with appropriate care, since it can cause skin burns, permanent eye damage, and irritation to the mucous membranes. These burns or blisters may not appear until several hours after exposure. Latex gloves offer no protection, so specially resistant gloves, such as those made of nitrile rubber, should be worn when handling the compound. Concentrated acetic acid can be ignited with some difficulty in the laboratory. It becomes a flammable risk if the ambient temperature exceeds 39 °C (102 °F), and can form explosive mixtures with air above this temperature (
explosive limits: 5.4%–16%).
The hazards of solutions of acetic acid depend on the concentration. The following table lists the
Directive 67/548/EEC of acetic acid solutions:
{| class="wikitable"|-! Concentrationby weight! Molarity! Classification! List of R-phrases|-| 10%–25%| 1.67–4.16 mol/L| Irritant (
Xi)| |-| 25%–90%| 4.16–14.99 mol/L| Corrosive (
C)| |-| >90%| >14.99 mol/L| Corrosive (
C)| , |-|}
Solutions at more than 25% acetic acid are handled in a fume hood because of the pungent, corrosive vapour. Dilute acetic acid, in the form of vinegar, is harmless. However, ingestion of stronger solutions is dangerous to human and animal life. It can cause severe damage to the
digestive system, and a potentially lethal change in the acidity of the
blood.
Due to incompatibilities, it is recommended to keep acetic acid away from chromic acid, ethylene glycol, nitric acid, perchloric acid, permanganates,
peroxides and
hydroxyls.
See also
Uses
- Vinegar
- Pickling, a food preservation method
- Acetic acid bacteria, produce vinegar from alcoholic solutions
- Acetic acid (data page)
- Acetobacter, an important genus of acetic acid bacteria
- Descaling agent, often contains acetic acid
Chemistry
- Common chemicals, where to purchase common chemicals used in experiments
- Carboxylic acid, compounds containing the -COOH group
- Fatty acid, straight-chain carboxylic acids
- Acetate anion, CH3COO−, abbreviated AcO−
- Acetyl group, the CH3-CO– group, abbreviated Ac
- Coenzyme A, an important acetyl-carrier in cells
Related chemicals
References
External links
-
- Computational Chemistry Wiki
-
- Acetic acid MSDS (Material Safety Data Sheet)
- National Pollutant Inventory - Acetic acid fact sheet
- NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards
- 29 CFR 1910.1000, Table Z-1 (US Permissible exposure limits)
- Occupational Training NFPA tables
- Celanese, major acetic acid producer
- Usage of acetic acid in Organic Syntheses
- Acetic acid pH and titration - freeware for data analysis, simulation and distribution diagram generation
- Carl Edwin Lindgren (July, 1991). Irritated Over Darkroom Chemicals - Acrid Fumes can be Dangerous. PSA Journal, Vol. 57, No. 7, 13.
Acetic acid - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Acetic acid, also known as ethanoic acid, is an organic chemical compound, giving vinegar its sour taste and pungent smell. Its structural formula is represented as CH 3 COOH.
Safety (MSDS) data for acetic acid
Safety (MSDS) data for acetic acid ... Glossary of terms on this data sheet. The information on this web page is provided to help you to work safely, but it is intended to be an ...
Definition: acetic acid from Online Medical Dictionary
The Online Medical Dictionary is a searchable dictionary of definitions from medicine, science and technology.
Acetic acid
Ulster Beekeepers Website ... ACETIC ACID . Acetic Acid can be purchased for the purposes of sterilizing beehives and combs contaminated with Nosema spores
Safety Glossary Definition - Glacial acetic acid
Safety Glossary Definition - Glacial acetic acid ... Glacial acetic acid is called "glacial" because its freezing point (16.7 C) is only slightly below room temperature.
Introductionpage
Esterification of Acetic Acid and Isoamyl Alcohol with a Heterogeneous catalyst
acetic acid
Environmental Fate - Ecotoxicology - Human Health - A to Z Index - Home . GENERAL INFORMATION . Description: Used to control a wide variety of annual and ...
Acetic acid
Acetic acid (ethanoic acid) has been used for hundreds of years as a preservative and is more commonly known as vinegar. It can be produced by bacteria if oxygen is allowed into ...
Glacial Acetic Acid - Trading & Distributor of Glacial Acetic Acid
Glacial Acetic Acid MANUCAFTURE, Glacial Acetic Acid DISTRIBUTOR, BUY Glacial Acetic Acid NOW ... was established in 2000 as chemicals trading company. Over the years our product ...
Acetic acid 33% liquid
Acetic acid 33% liquid Acetic acid dilute 420microlitres/5ml oral solution sugar free Acetic acid glacial Aciclovir 400mg/5ml oral suspension sugar free Actinac lotion Additrace ...