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Alachlor

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CAS:15972-60-8
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CAS:15972-60-8
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CAS:15972-60-8
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CAS:15972-60-8
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Products Intro: Product Name:Alachlor
CAS:15972-60-8
Purity:0.98 Package:1kg,2kg,5kg,10kg,25kg

Alachlor manufacturers

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  • 2019-07-06
  • CAS:15972-60-8
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Related articles

  • Alachlor Toxicity
  • Alachlor is a preemergence herbicide registered by Monsanto in 1969. Alachlor was banned as an herbicide in the European Union....
  • Oct 27,2021
Alachlor Basic information
description Chemical Properties Uses Toxicity Preparation Precaution
Product Name:Alachlor
Synonyms:.alpha.-Chloro-2’,6’-diethyl-N-methoxymethylacetanilide;2-(Chloro-N-(2’,-6’-diethylphenyl)-N-(methoxymethyl)acetqmide;2-Chloro-2',6'-diethyl-N-(methoxymethyl)-acetanilde;2-chloro-2’,6’-diethyl-n-(methoxymethyl)-acetanilid;2-chloro-n-(2,6-diethylphenyl)-n-(methoxymethyl)-acetamid;Freedom;Lariat;Lasso EC
CAS:15972-60-8
MF:C14H20ClNO2
MW:269.77
EINECS:240-110-8
Product Categories:Amines;Aromatics;AmideMethod Specific;2000/60/EC;A;AA to ALPesticides&Metabolites;A-BAlphabetic;Alpha sort;European Community: ISO and DIN;Herbicides;Pesticides&Metabolites;Agro-Products
Mol File:15972-60-8.mol
Alachlor Structure
Alachlor Chemical Properties
Melting point 39-42°C
Boiling point 100°C (0.02 mmHg)
density d2515.6 1.133
refractive index 1.5388 (estimate)
Fp -18 °C
storage temp. 2-8°C
solubility DMF: 30 mg/ml,DMSO: 30 mg/ml
pka1.20±0.50(Predicted)
Water Solubility 0.024 g/100 mL
Merck 13,201
BRN 2944476
CAS DataBase Reference15972-60-8(CAS DataBase Reference)
NIST Chemistry ReferenceAlachlor(15972-60-8)
EPA Substance Registry SystemAlachlor (15972-60-8)
Safety Information
Hazard Codes Xn;N,N,Xn,F,T
Risk Statements 22-40-43-50/53-67-65-38-11-52/53-39/23/24/25-23/24/25-51/53
Safety Statements 36/37-46-60-61-62-45-16
RIDADR UN 3077
WGK Germany 3
RTECS AE1225000
HazardClass 9
PackingGroup III
Hazardous Substances Data15972-60-8(Hazardous Substances Data)
ToxicityLD50 orally in rats: 1200 mg/kg (Evans)
MSDS Information
Alachlor Usage And Synthesis
descriptionAlachlor is a pre- and postemergence herbicide used to control annual grasses and many broad-leaved weeds in corn and in many other crops. There are liquid, dry flowable, microencapsulated, and granular formulations. Alachlor is applied by ground, aerial, and chemigation equipment. It can also be mixed with dry bulk fertilizer. It is lost from soil mainly through volatilization, photodegradation, and biodegradation. Alachlor and its degradation products may be found in soil, groundwater, and surface water.
Chemical PropertiesAlachlor is a cream-colored or white solid that dissolves readily in acetone, benzene, and ethanol, but dissolves only slightly in water. It resists breakdown by ultraviolet radiation, but reacts with water under strongly acidic or alkaline conditions.
UsesIt can be used as selective herbicide for dryland bud. If a plant bud absorbs the agent, it can inhibit the activity of the protease and hinder protein synthesis, resulting in the death of weeds. It is mainly used for the germination of weeds in the soil before the seedlings, which is basically ineffective for the unearthed weeds. It can prevent annual grasses in the fields of dryland crops such as soybean, cotton, sugar beet, corn, peanut and rape, such as barnyard grass, Goosegrass, autumn grass, crabgrass, Goosegrass, Setaria, Brachiaria etc.
ToxicityAlachlor is slightly to practically nontoxic to birds, mammals, and honey bees; highly to moderately toxic to freshwater fish; and highly toxic to aquatic plants.
The acute oral LD50 for rats is 1200mg/kg. The acute percutaneous LD50 for rabbits is 5000mg/kg (13300mg/kg). Acute inhalation is LC50>1.04mg/L in rats. The non action dose of 90d in rats is 17mg/kg, and the chronic non action dose is 2.5mg/kg. It is of no teratogenicity and mutagenesis. Bronchioloalveolar tumors and liver and lung tumors can be found at 15mg/kg and 240 ~ 260mg/kg doses in mice. For carp it is LC503.72mg/L.
PreparationAlachlor can be synthesized in the following manner:
15972-60-8 synthesis
Precaution
  1. If there is no rain in the half month after the use of Methamide, watering or shallow mixed soil should be carried out to ensure the efficacy. But the accumulation of soil water is easy to take place.
  2. Methamide has a certain stimulating effect on the eyes and skin. Care should be paid to the administration and dispensation. If splashed into the eyes and skin, it should be cleaned immediately.
  3. Sorghum, millet, cucumber, melon, carrots, spinach, leeks are sensitive to alachlor and it should not be used for these plants.
  4. Methamide should be kept at the temperature above 0℃, and the crystallization will appear at less than 0℃. The crystallized Methamide emulsion can be recovered at 15 - 20 ℃, which does not affect the efficacy of the drug. 5. Alachlor emulsion can dissolve poly vinyl chloride, acrylonitrile, butadiene, styrene plastic and other plastic products. Therefore, this kind of material can not be used as a packing container, without corrosion to metal such as aluminum, iron, stainless steel etc.
DescriptionAlachlor is a herbicide. Occupational contact dermatitis was rarely observed in agricultural workers.
Chemical PropertiesAlachlor is a colorless to yellow crystal chemical substance. It is soluble in most organic solvents, but sparingly in water. Alachlor is an RUP, therefore it should be purchased and used only by certified, trained workers and plant protection applicators. The US EPA categorizes it as toxicity class III, meaning slightly toxic. However, alachlor products bear the signal word danger on their labels because of their potential to cause cancer in laboratory animals. Alachlor is an aniline herbicide used to control annual grasses and broadleaf weeds in field corn, soybeans, and peanuts. It is a selective systemic herbicide, absorbed by germinating shoots and roots. It works by interfering with a plant's ability to produce protein and by interfering with root elongation. Alachlor has extensive use as a herbicide in the United States. It is available as granules or emulsifiable concentrate.
UsesAlachlor is used pre- or early post-emergence to control annual grasses and many broadleaved weeds mainly in maize, but also in cotton, brassicas, oilseed rape, peanuts, radish, soy beans, and sugar-cane.
UsesPreemergence, early postemergence or soil-incorporated herbicide used to control most annual grasses and many annual broad-leaved weeds in beans, corn, cotton, milo, peanuts, peas, soybeans, sunflower and certain woody ornamentals.
UsesAlachlor is one of the most widely used herbicides in the United States and is used as an herbicide for grasses, broadleaf seeds, corn, sorghum, soybeans, peanuts, cotton, vegetables, and forage crops.
DefinitionChEBI: An aromatic amide that is N-(2,6-diethylphenyl)acetamide substituted by a methoxymethyl group at at the nitrogen atom while one of the hydrogens of the methyl group has been replaced by a chlorine atom.
General DescriptionCrystalline solid. Melting point 104-106°F (40-41°C). Used as a herbicide.
Air & Water ReactionsHydrolyzes under strongly acidic and strongly basic conditions.
Reactivity ProfileA halogenated acetamide. Organic amides/imides react with azo and diazo compounds to generate toxic gases. Flammable gases are formed by the reaction of organic amides/imides with strong reducing agents. Amides are very weak bases (weaker than water). Imides are less basic yet and in fact react with strong bases to form salts. That is, they can react as acids. Mixing amides with dehydrating agents such as P2O5 or SOCl2 generates the corresponding nitrile. The combustion of these compounds generates mixed oxides of nitrogen (NOx).
Health HazardAlachlor is a slightly toxic herbicide. It causes slight to moderate degrees of skin irritation. While a 90-day study on laboratory rats and dogs given diets containing low to moderate amounts of alachlor (1–100 mg/kg/day) showed no adverse effects, a 1-year study indicated that at a dose above 1 mg/kg/day, alachlor causes damage in the liver, spleen, and kidney.
Agricultural UsesHerbicide: A pre-emergence herbicide for corn, soybeans, and peanuts, and other field crops. It is a selective systemic herbicide, absorbed by germinating shoots and by roots. It works by interfering with a plant's ability to produce protein and by interfering with root elongation. It is available as granules or emulsifiable concentrate. Alachlor is used in mixed formulations with atrazine, glyphosate, trifluralin, and imaquin. Not approved for use in the EU. A U.S. EPA restricted Use Pesticide (RUP).
Trade nameAGIMIX® Araclor; ALAGAM®; ALAGAN®; ALANEX®; ALAPAZ®, suspended; ALAZINE®; ALATOX 480®; ALCLOR 48 LE®; CHIMICHLOR®; LARIAT®; LASAGRIN®; LASSAGRIN®; LASSO®; LASSO MICRO-TECH®; METACHLOR®; PARTNER® Arachlor; PILLARZO®; SANACHLOR®
Contact allergensAlachlor is a herbicide. Occupational contact dermatitis was rarely observed in agricultural workers.
Safety ProfileModerately toxic by ingestion, skin contact, and possibly other routes. Questionable carcinogen with experimental carcinogenic data. Human mutation data reported. When heated to decomposition it emits very toxic fumes of Cland NOx.
Potential ExposureA chloracetanilide herbicide. In manufacture, formulation and application of this preemergence herbicide, personnel may be exposed. Its major use (99%) is as a preemergence herbicide for field crops (corn, soybeans, and peanuts, etc.).
Environmental FateAlachlor dissipates from soil mainly through volatilization, photodegradation, and biodegradation. Many metabolites have been identified; diethylaniline, detected in some soil studies, interacts rapidly with humic substances in the soil. A half-life in soil of 7-38 days has been reported. Under certain conditions, alachlor can leach beyond the root zone and migrate to groundwater.
Metabolic pathwayThe metabolism of alachlor using in vitro incubations with microsomal fractions prepared from liver and nasal turbinate tissues of rat and mouse (m1) results in conversion to 3,5-diethylbenzoquinone-4-imine via the key intermediate of 2,6-diethylaniline, the formation of which requires catalysis by microsomal arylamidases. 2,6-Diethylaniline is oxidized to 4-amino- 3,5-diethylphenol resulting in quinone imine by further oxidation. Rat nasal tissue possesses high enzymatic activity which can promote the formation of the reactive quinone imine. A methylsulfide metabolite of alachlor is shown to be a precursor to 2,6- diethylaniline. The deposition of radioactivity in the rat nasal tissue is more pronounced following oral administration of the methylsulfide metabolite of alachlor.
The extent of DNA adduct formation by alachlor and its metabolites is used as a guide to deduce the causal agent(s) in the carcinogenicity of this herbicide. Metabolic studies (m2) indicate that 2-chloro-N- hydroxymethoxymethyl-N-(2,6-diethylphenyl)- acetamide is an intermediate in forming 2-chloro-N- (2,6-diethylphenyl)acetamide and presumably formaldehyde in the mouse liver microsomal mixed- function oxidase system and in yielding O-glucuronide of 2-chloro-N-hydroxymethyl-N-(2,6- diethylphenyl)acetamide in the urine of alachlor-treated mice.
Incubation of alachlor in the presence of glutathione (GSH) with the cytosolic fraction from rat, mouse, and monkey (m3) produces the GSH conjugate of alachlor as the initial metabolite. The conjugation occurs through thiol displacement of the chlorine atom of alachlor and is catalyzed by glutathione S-transferase (GST). Kidney cell-free preparations of rats and monkeys readily degrade the alachlor GSH conjugate through the mercapturic acid pathway to the corresponding cysteinylglycine, cysteine, and N-acetylcysteine conjugates of alachlor.
Upon UV irradiation, 14/13C-alachlor is dechlorinated and forms a number of intermediates that retain the aromatic ring and carbonyl carbons. These compounds include hydroxyalachlor, norchloralachlor, 2' ,6'-diethylacetanilide, 2-hydroxy- 2' ,6' -diethyl-N-methylacetanilide, and a lactam. The fungus transforms 98.6% of 14C-alachlor added to the fermentation broth, and metabolism occurs predominantly by benzylic hydroxylation of one of the arylethyl side chains. Two major metabolites are isomers of 2-chloro-N-(methoxymethyl)-N-[2-ethyl-6-(1- hydroxyethyl)-phenyl]acetamide and 2-chloro-N-(2,6- diethylphenyl)acetamide. The minor metabolite is 2-chloro-N-(methoxymethyl)-N-(2-vinyl-6- ethlyphenyl)acetamide. N-Dealkylation by fungal biotransformation is also observed.
ShippingUN2588 Pesticides, solid, toxic, Hazard Class: 6.1; Labels: 6.1-Poisonous materials, Technical Name Required.
Toxicity evaluationAlachlor has a low persistence in soil, with a half-life ofz8 days. The main means of degradation is by soil microbes. It has moderate mobility in sandy and silty soils, and thus can migrate to groundwater. The largest groundwater-testing program for a pesticide, the National Alachlor Well Water Survey, was conducted throughout the last half of the 1980s. More than sixmillion private and domestic wells were tested for the presence of alachlor. Less than 1% of all of the wells had detectable levels of alachlor. In the wells in which the compound was detected, concentrations ranged from 0.1 to 1.0 mg l-1, with themajority having concentrations≈0.2mg l-1. Alachlor is relatively stable to hydrolysis and photolysis in water, and degradation in water is not considered as an important environmental fate process. Alachlor appears to be persistent under aquifer biological and geochemical conditions. This means that alachlor can appear in groundwater years after use and can migrate with groundwater away from use areas. Alachlor contamination has resulted in loss of untreated groundwater as a source of drinking water in Florida and other states. The bioaccumulation factor in the channel catfish is 5.8 times the ambient water concentration, indicating that alachlor is not expected to accumulate appreciably in aquatic organisms.
IncompatibilitiesIncompatible 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. Corrosive to iron and steel.
Waste DisposalThis compound is hydrolyzed under strongly acid or alkaline conditions, to chloroacetic acid, methanol, formaldehyde and 2,6-diethylanilne. Incineration is recommended as a disposal procedure. Techniques for alachlor removal from potable water have been reviewed by EPA but the data revealed no superior method. Improper disposal of pesticides is a violation of federal law. Dispose In accordance with 40CFR165, follow recommendations for the disposal of pesticides and pesticide containers.
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