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ethyl hydrogen sulphate

ethyl hydrogen sulphate  Structure
CAS No.
540-82-9
Chemical Name:
ethyl hydrogen sulphate
Synonyms
Sulfovinic acid;Sulfethylic acid;Ethylhydrogensulfat;Ethyl sulfate (7CI);Ethy Hydrogen Sulphate;Glimepiride Impurity 29;ethyl hydrogen sulphate;Ethyl sulfate free-forM;sulfuric acid ethyl ester;Sulfuric acid, monoethyl ester
CBNumber:
CB1888423
Molecular Formula:
C2H6O4S
Molecular Weight:
126.13
MOL File:
540-82-9.mol
Modify Date:
2023/5/4 17:34:39

ethyl hydrogen sulphate Properties

Melting point -32°C (estimate)
Boiling point 280°C
Density 1.458
refractive index 1.4105
form liquid (estimate)
pka -3.14±0.15(Predicted)
Stability Stable. Incompatible with strong oxidizing agents, metals
CAS DataBase Reference 540-82-9
EPA Substance Registry System Sulfuric acid, monoethyl ester (540-82-9)

SAFETY

Risk and Safety Statements

Symbol(GHS) 
GHS05
Signal word  Danger
Hazard statements  H315-H318
Precautionary statements  P280-P305+P351+P338-P310-P264-P280-P302+P352-P321-P332+P313-P362
RIDADR  2571
HazardClass  8
PackingGroup  II

ethyl hydrogen sulphate Chemical Properties,Uses,Production

Chemical Properties

Colorless, oily liquid; boils at 280°C (536°F)(decomposes); density 1.367; highly solublein water; hydrolyzes forming sulfuric acid.

Uses

Ethyl hydrogen sulfate is used as an intermediate in the synthesis of ethanol from ethylene.

General Description

ethyl hydrogen sulphate are colorless, oily liquids. They are soluble in water and weigh more than water. Contact with the material may cause severe irritation to skin, eyes, and mucous membranes. ethyl hydrogen sulphate may be toxic by ingestion, inhalation and skin absorption. ethyl hydrogen sulphate is used to make other chemicals.

Air & Water Reactions

They are soluble in water and weigh more than water. Heat may be generated by dissolution into water.

Reactivity Profile

Oxidizing acids are generally soluble in water with the release of hydrogen ions. The resulting solutions have pH's of less than 7.0. Materials in this group react with chemical bases (for example: amines and inorganic hydroxides) to form salts. These neutralization reactions occur as the base accepts hydrogen ions that the acid donates. Neutralizations can generate dangerously large amounts of heat in small spaces. The dissolution of acids in water or the dilution of their concentrated solutions with water may generate significant heat. The addition of water acids often generates sufficient heat in the small region of mixing to boil some of the water explosively. The resulting "bumping" spatters acid widely. These materials have significant ability as oxidizing agents. but that ability varies (for example, from high for nitric acid to low for sulfuric acid and most sulfonic acids). They can react with active metals, including iron and aluminum, and also many less active metals, to dissolve the metal and liberate hydrogen and/or toxic gases. Like other acids, materials in this group can initiate polymerization in certain classes of organic compounds. Their reactions with cyanide salts and compounds release gaseous hydrogen cyanide. Flammable and/or toxic gases are also often generated by their reactions with dithiocarbamates, isocyanates, mercaptans, nitrides, nitriles, sulfides, and weak or strong reducing agents. Additional gas-generating reactions occur with sulfites, nitrites, thiosulfates (to give H2S and SO3), dithionites (SO2), and even carbonates: the carbon dioxide gas from the last is nontoxic but the heat and spattering from the reaction can be troublesome. Acids often catalyze (increase the rate) of chemical reactions.

Health Hazard

TOXIC; inhalation, ingestion or contact (skin, eyes) with vapors, dusts or substance may cause severe injury, burns or death. Contact with molten substance may cause severe burns to skin and eyes. Reaction with water or moist air will release toxic, corrosive or flammable gases. Reaction with water may generate much heat that will increase the concentration of fumes in the air. Fire will produce irritating, corrosive and/or toxic gases. Runoff from fire control or dilution water may be corrosive and/or toxic and cause pollution.

Fire Hazard

Combustible material: may burn but does not ignite readily. Substance will react with water (some violently) releasing flammable, toxic or corrosive gases and runoff. When heated, vapors may form explosive mixtures with air: indoors, outdoors and sewers explosion hazards. Most vapors are heavier than air. They will spread along ground and collect in low or confined areas (sewers, basements, tanks). Vapors may travel to source of ignition and flash back. Contact with metals may evolve flammable hydrogen gas. Containers may explode when heated or if contaminated with water.

540-82-9(ethyl hydrogen sulphate )Related Search:

ethyl hydrogen sulphate Ethy Hydrogen Sulphate Sulfuric acid, monoethyl ester Sulfethylic acid Sulfovinic acid Sulfuric acid hydrogen ethyl ester sulfuric acid ethyl ester Ethyl sulfate free-forM Ethyl sulfate (7CI) Ethylhydrogensulfat Glimepiride Impurity 29 Glimepiride Impurity 29 Monomer 540-82-9 Pharmaceutical Intermediates