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Benzene

Benzene Structure
CAS No.
71-43-2
Chemical Name:
Benzene
Synonyms
Benzen;BENZOL;Benzene, OMniSolv(R);Annulene;Pure benzene;PHENE;Benzeen;anhydrous benzene;Benzol,HPLC Grade;Benzene, PestiSolv(R)
CBNumber:
CB6854153
Molecular Formula:
C6H6
Molecular Weight:
78.11
MOL File:
71-43-2.mol
MSDS File:
SDS
Modify Date:
2024/3/14 15:18:27

Benzene Properties

Melting point 5.5 °C (lit.)
Boiling point 80 °C (lit.)
Density 0.874 g/mL at 25 °C (lit.)
vapor density 2.77 (vs air)
vapor pressure 166 mm Hg ( 37.7 °C)
refractive index n20/D 1.501(lit.)
Flash point 12 °F
storage temp. room temp
solubility Miscible with alcohol, chloroform, dichloromethane, diethyl ether, acetone and acetic acid.
pka 43(at 25℃)
form Liquid
color APHA: ≤10
Odor Paint-thinner-like odor detectable at 12 ppm
Relative polarity 0.111
explosive limit 1.4-8.0%(V)
Odor Threshold 2.7ppm
Water Solubility 0.18 g/100 mL
λmax λ: 280 nm Amax: 1.0
λ: 290 nm Amax: 0.15
λ: 300 nm Amax: 0.06
λ: 330 nm Amax: 0.02
λ: 350-400 nm Amax: 0.01
Merck 14,1066
BRN 969212
Henry's Law Constant 10.4 at 45.00 °C, 11.4 at 50.00 °C, 13.3 at 55.00 °C, 14.5 at 60.00 °C, 16.8 at 65.00 °C, 19.2 at 70.00 °C (static headspace-GC, Park et al., 2004)
Exposure limits TLV-TWA 10 ppm (~32 mg/m3) (ACGIH and OSHA); ceiling 25 ppm (~80 mg/m3) (OSHA and MSHA); peak 50 ppm (~160 mg/m3)/10 min/8 h (OSHA); carcinogenicity: Suspected Human Carcinogen (ACGIH), Human Sufficient Evidence (IARC).
Dielectric constant 2.3(20℃)
Stability Stable. Substances to be avoided include strong oxidizing agents, sulfuric acid, nitric acid, halogens. Highly flammable.
InChIKey UHOVQNZJYSORNB-UHFFFAOYSA-N
LogP 2.130
CAS DataBase Reference 71-43-2(CAS DataBase Reference)
IARC 1 (Vol. 29, Sup 7. 100F, 120) 2018
NIST Chemistry Reference Benzene(71-43-2)
EPA Substance Registry System Benzene (71-43-2)

SAFETY

Risk and Safety Statements

Symbol(GHS) 
GHS02,GHS07,GHS08
Signal word  Danger
Hazard statements  H225-H304-H315-H319-H340-H350-H372-H412
Precautionary statements  P210-P273-P301+P310-P303+P361+P353-P305+P351+P338-P331
Hazard Codes  F,T
Risk Statements  45-46-11-36/38-48/23/24/25-65-39/23/24/25-23/24/25
Safety Statements  53-45-36/37-16-7
OEB E
OEL TWA: 0.1 ppm, STEL: 1 ppm
RIDADR  UN 1114 3/PG 2
WGK Germany  3
RTECS  CY1400000
3-10
Autoignition Temperature 560 °C
TSCA  Yes
HS Code  2902 20 00
HazardClass  3
PackingGroup  II
Toxicity LD50 orally in young adult rats: 3.8 ml/kg (Kimura)
IDLA 500 ppm
NFPA 704
3
2 0

Benzene price More Price(37)

Manufacturer Product number Product description CAS number Packaging Price Updated Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) 401765 Benzene anhydrous, 99.8% 71-43-2 100ML ₹3092.78 2022-06-14 Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) 401765 Benzene anhydrous, 99.8% 71-43-2 1L ₹4716.23 2022-06-14 Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) PHR1310 Benzene Pharmaceutical Secondary Standard; Certified Reference Material 71-43-2 1G ₹9874.28 2022-06-14 Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) 401765 Benzene anhydrous, 99.8% 71-43-2 2L ₹8723.48 2022-06-14 Buy
Sigma-Aldrich(India) CRM48617 Benzene solution certified reference material, TraceCERT?, 200?μg/mL in methanol 71-43-2 1PKG ₹2261 2022-06-14 Buy
Product number Packaging Price Buy
401765 100ML ₹3092.78 Buy
401765 1L ₹4716.23 Buy
PHR1310 1G ₹9874.28 Buy
401765 2L ₹8723.48 Buy
CRM48617 1PKG ₹2261 Buy

Benzene Chemical Properties,Uses,Production

Description

Benzene is a colorless, volatile, highly flammable liquid that is used extensively in the chemical industry and received wide interest in the early days of organic chemistry.
Benzene
Because of its structure, benzene is a very stable organic compound. It does not readily undergo addition reactions. Addition reactions involving benzene require high temperature, pressure, and special catalysts. The most common reactions involving benzene involve substitution reactions. Numerous atoms and groups of atoms may replace a hydrogen atom or several hydrogen atoms in benzene. Th ree important types of substitution reactions involving benzene are alkylation, halogenation, and nitration. In alkylation, an alkyl group or groups substitute for hydrogen(s).

Chemical Properties

Benzene is a clear, volatile, colorless, highly flammable liquid with a pleasant, characteristic odor. It is an aromatic hydrocarbon that boils at 80.1 DC. Benzene is used as a solvent in many areas of industries, such as rubber and shoe manufacturing, and in the production of other important substances, such as styrene, phenol, and cyclohexane. It is essential in the manufacture of detergents, pesticides, solvents, and paint removers. It is present in fuels such as gasoline up to the level of 5%.

Physical properties

Clear, colorless to light yellow watery liquid with an aromatic, musty, phenolics or gasoline-like odor. At 40 °C, an odor threshold concentration of 190 μg/L in air was determined by Young et al. (1996). An odor threshold of 4.68 ppmv was determined by Leonardos et al. (1969). A detection odor threshold concentration of 108 mg/m3 (34 ppmv) was reported by Punter (1983). The average least detectable odor threshold concentrations in water at 60 °C and in air at 40 °C were 0.072 and 0.5 mg/L, respectively (Alexander et al., 1982).

Occurrence

Detectable levels of benzene have been found in a number of soft drinks that contain either a sodium or potassium benzoate preservative and ascorbic acid, and 'diet' type products containing no added sugar are reported to be particularly likely to contain benzene at detectable levels. Surveys carried out in the USA, the UK and Canada have all confirmed that a small proportion of these products may contain low levels of benzene. For example, in a survey of 86 samples analysed by the FDA between April 2006 and March 2007, only five products were found to contain benzene at concentrations above 5 ug kg-1. The levels found were in a range from approximately 10–90 ug kg-1. A survey of 150 UK-produced soft drinks by the Food Standards Agency (FSA) published in 2006 showed that four products contained benzene at levels above 10 ug kg-1, and the highest level recorded was 28 ug kg-1. However, it has been reported that higher levels may develop in these products during prolonged storage, especially if they are exposed to daylight.
Benzene may also be formed in some mango and cranberry drinks in the absence of added preservatives, because these fruits contain natural benzoates.

History

Benzene was discovered in 1825 by Michael Faraday (1791–1867), who identified it in a liquid residue from heated whale oil. Faraday called the compound bicarburet of hydrogen, and its name was later changed to benzin by Eilhardt Mitscherlich (1794–1863), who isolated the compound from benzoin (C14H12O2).

Uses

Manufacturing of ethylbenzene (for styrene monomer), dodecylbenzene (for detergents), cyclo- hexane (for nylon), phenol, nitrobenzene (for ani- line), maleic anhydride, chlorobenzene, diphenyl, benzene hexachloride, benzene-sulfonic acid, and as a solvent.

Production Methods

Today benzene, which is a natural component of petroleum, is obtained from petroleum by several processes. Toluene hydrodealkylation involves mixing toluene (C6H5CH3) and hydrogen in the presence of catalysts and temperatures of approximately 500°C and pressures of about 50 atmospheres to produce benzene and methane: C6H5CH3 + H2 → C6H6 + CH4. Hydrodealkylation strips the methyl group from toluene to produce benzene. Toluene disproportionation involves combining toluene so that the methyl groups bond to one aromatic ring, producing benzene and xylene. Benzene can also be obtained from petroleum reforming in which temperature, pressure, and catalysts are used to convert petroleum components to benzene, which can then be extracted using solvents and distillation processes. Another source of benzene is pyrolysis gasoline or pygas.

Definition

ChEBI: Benzene is a six-carbon aromatic annulene in which each carbon atom donates one of its two 2p electrons into a delocalised pi system. A toxic, flammable liquid byproduct of coal distillation, it is used as an industrial solvent. Benzene is a carcinogen that also damages bone marrow and the central nervous system.

Reactions

Benzene reacts (1) with chlorine, to form (a) substitution products (one-half of the chlorine forms hydrogen chloride) such as chlorobenzene, C6H5Cl; dichlorobenzene, C6H4Cl2(1,4) and (1,2); trichlorobenzene, C6H3Cl3(1,2,4); tetrachlorobenzene (1,2,3,5); and (b) addition products, such as benzene dichloride C6H6Cl2; benzene tetrachloride, C6H6Cl4; and benzene hexachloride, C6H6Cl6. The formation of substitution products of the benzene nucleus, whether in benzene or its homologues, is favored by the presence of a catalyzer, e.g., iodine, phosphorus, iron; (2) with concentrated HNO3, to form nitrobenzene, C6H5NO2; 1,3- dinitrobenzene, C6H4(NO2)2 (1,3), 1,3,5-trinitrobenzene, C6H3(NO2)3 (1,3,5); (3) with concentrated H2SO4, to form benzene sulfonic acid, C6H5SO3H, benzene disulfonic acid, C6H4(SO3H)2(1,3), benzene trisulfonic acid, C6H3(SO3H)3 (1,3–5); (4) with methyl chloride plus anhydrous aluminum chloride (Friedel-Crafts reaction) to form toluene, monomethyl benzene, C6H5CH3; dimethyl benzene C6H4(CH3)2; trimethyl benzene, C6H3(CH3)3; (5) with acetyl chloride plus anhydrous aluminum chloride (Friedel-Crafts reaction) to form acetophenone (methylphenyl ketone), C6H5COCH3.

General Description

Benzene appears as a clear colorless liquid with a petroleum-like odor. Flash point less than 0 °F. Less dense than water and slightly soluble in water. Hence floats on water. Vapors are heavier than air.

Air & Water Reactions

Highly flammable. Slightly soluble in water.

Reactivity Profile

Benzene reacts vigorously with allyl chloride or other alkyl halides even at minus 70°C in the presence of ethyl aluminum dichloride or ethyl aluminum sesquichloride. Explosions have been reported [NFPA 491M 1991]. Ignites in contact with powdered chromic anhydride [Mellor 11:235 1946-47]. Incompatible with oxidizing agents such as nitric acid. Mixtures with bromine trifluoride, bromine pentafluoride, iodine pentafluoride, iodine heptafluoride and other interhalogens can ignite upon heating [Bretherick 5th ed. 1995]. Benzene and cyanogen halides yield HCl as a byproduct (Hagedorn, F. H. Gelbke, and Federal Republic of Germany. 2002. Nitriles. In Ullman Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.). The reaction of Benzene and trichloroacetonitrile evolves toxic chloroform and HCl gasses. (Hagedorn, F., H.-P. Gelbke, and Federal Republic of Germany. 2002. Nitriles. In Ullman Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry. Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA.).

Hazard

The acute toxicity of benzene is low. Inhalation of benzene can cause dizziness, euphoria, giddiness, headache, nausea, drowsiness, and weakness. Benzene can cause moderate irritation to skin and severe irritation to eyes and mucous membranes. Benzene readily penetrates the skin to cause the same toxic effects as inhalation or ingestion. The chronic toxicity of benzene is significant. Exposure to benzene affects the blood and blood-forming organs such as the bone marrow, causing irreversible injury; blood disorders including anemia and leukemia may result. The symptoms of chronic benzene exposure may include fatigue, nervousness, irritability, blurred vision, and labored breathing. Benzene is regulated by OSHA as a carcinogen (Standard 1910.1028) and is listed in IARC Group 1 ("carcinogenic to humans"). This substance is classified as a "select carcinogen" under the criteria of the OSHA Laboratory Standard.

Flammability and Explosibility

Benzene is a highly flammable liquid (NFPA rating = 3), and its vapors may travel a considerable distance to a source of ignition and "flash back." Vapor-air mixtures are explosive above the flash point. Carbon dioxide and dry chemical extinguishers should be used to fight benzene fires.

Chemical Reactivity

Reactivity with Water No reaction; Reactivity with Common Materials: No reactions; Stability During Transport: Stable; Neutralizing Agents for Acids and Caustics: Not pertinent; Polymerization: Not pertinent; Inhibitor of Polymerization: Not pertinent.

Industrial uses

Benzene (C6H6, CAS No. 71-43-2) is an aromatic hydrocarbon compound used extensively in the chemical industry as an intermediate in the manufacture of polymers and other products. It is also a common atmospheric contaminant and is present in motor vehicle exhaust emissions and cigarette smoke.
In 1990, it was discovered by the USA soft drinks industry that benzene could be produced at low levels in certain soft drinks containing a benzoate preservative and ascorbic acid. Since benzene is a known human carcinogen, its presence in food and beverages is clearly undesirable.

Safety Profile

Confirmed human carcinogen producing myeloid leukemia, Hodgkin's dsease, and lymphomas by inhalation. Experimental carcinogenic, neoplastigenic, and tumorigenic data. A human poison by inhalation. An experimental poison by skin contact, intraperitoneal, intravenous, and possibly other routes. Moderately toxic by ingestion and subcutaneous routes. A severe eye and moderate sktn irritant. Human systemic effects by inhalation and ingestion: blood changes, increased body temperature. Experimental teratogenic and reproductive effects. Human mutation data reported. A narcotic. In industry, inhalation is the primary route of chronic benzene poisoning. Poisoning by skin contact has been reported. Recent (1 987) research indicates that effects are seen at less than 1 ppm. Exposures needed to be reduced to 0.1 ppm before no toxic effects were observed. Elimination is chiefly through the lungs.

Potential Exposure

Benzene is used as a constituent in motor fuels; as a solvent for fats; inks, oils, paints, plastics, and rubber, in the extraction of oils from seeds and nuts; in photogravure printing. It is also used as a chemical intermediate. By alkylation, chlorination, nitration, and sulfonation, chemicals, such as styrene, phenols, and malefic anhydride are produced. Benzene is also used in the manufacture of detergents, explosives, pharmaceuticals; in the manufacture of cyclohexane and ethylbenzene; and dye-stuffs. Increased concern for benzene as a significant environmental pollutant arises from public exposure to the presence of benzene in gasoline and the increased content in gasoline due to requirements for unleaded fuels for automobiles equipped with catalytic exhaust converters.

Carcinogenicity

Benzene is known to be a human carcinogen based on sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity from studies in humans.

Environmental Fate

Benzene is released to air primarily by vaporization and combustion emissions associated with its use in gasoline. Other sources are vapors from its production and use in manufacturing other chemicals. In addition, benzene may be in industrial effluents discharged into water and accidental releases from gas and oil production, refining and distribution industries. Benzene released to soil will either evaporate very quickly or leach to groundwater. It can be biodegraded by soil and groundwater microbes. Benzene released to surface water should mostly evaporate within a few hours to a few days, depending on quantity, temperature, water turbulence, etc. Although benzene does not degrade by hydrolysis, it may be biodegraded by microbes.

storage

work with benzene should be conducted in a fume hood to prevent exposure by inhalation, and splash goggles and impermeable gloves should be worn at all times to prevent eye and skin contact. Benzene should be used only in areas free of ignition sources.

Shipping

UN1114 Benzene, Hazard Class: 3; Labels: 3— Flammable liquid

Incompatibilities

Incompatible with oxidizers (chlorates, nitrates, peroxides, permanganates, perchlorates, chlorine, bromine, fluorine, etc.); contact may cause fires or explosions. Keep away from alkaline materials, strong bases, strong acids, oxoacids, epoxides, many fluorides and perchlorates, nitric acid.

Waste Disposal

Dissolve or mix the material with a combustible solvent and burn in a chemical incinerator equipped with an afterburner and scrubber. All federal, state, and local environmental regulations must be observed. Dilution with alcohol or acetone to minimize smoke is recommended. Bacterial degradation is also possible.

Regulations

Current USA and EU legislation does not set maximum limits for benzene in soft drinks. However, the FDA has adopted the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) maximum contaminant level (MCL) for drinking water of 5 ppb as a quality standard for bottled water. ThisMCL has been used to evaluate the significance of benzene contamination in the soft drinks tested in surveys. The FSA has used the World Health Organization (WHO) guideline level for benzene in water of 10 mg kg-1 as a point of reference for its own survey results.

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