Online Encyclopedia

PICRIC ACID, or TRINITROPHENOL, C6H2

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 585 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PICRIC

ACID, or TRINITROPHENOL, C6H2  .OH• (NO2)3 [I'2'4'6], an explosive and dyestuff formed by the
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action of concentrated nitric acid on indigo, aniline, resins,
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silk, wool, leather, &c . It is the final product of the
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direct nitration of phenol, and is usually prepared by the nitration of the mixture of phenol sulphonic acids obtained by
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heating phenol with concentrated sulphuric acid (E . Eisenmann and A . Arche,
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Fag. pat., 4539 (1888) . It may also be obtained by oxidizing the symmetrical trinitrobenzene with potassium p . 352) . It crystallizes from
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water in yellow plates melting at 122.50 C., which sublime on careful heating, but explode when rapidly heated . It is poisonous and possesses a bitter taste, hence its name from the Greek 7nKpo3, bitter . It has a strongly acid reaction, being almost comparable with the carboxylic acids . By the action of
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bleaching powder it is converted into chlorpicrin, CC13•NO2 . Phosphorus pentachloride converts it into picryl chloride, C6H2C1(NO2)3, which is a true acid chloride, being decomposed by water with the regeneration of picric acid and the formation of hydrochloric acid; with
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ammonia it yields picramide, CsH2NH2(NO2)3•
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Silver picrate and methyl iodide yield the methyl ester, which gives with ammonia picramide . Picric acid forms many well-defined salts, of a yellow or red-brown colour .

It also yields crystalline compounds with many aromatic

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hydrocarbons and bases . It imparts a yellow colour to wool and silk . The chief application of picric acid and its salts is in the manufacture of
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explosives . When ignited, picric acid burns quietly with a smoky flame. and it is very difficult to detonate by percussion; its salts, however, are more readily detonated . The more important picric powders are melinite, believed to be a mixture of fused picric acid and
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gun-cotton; lyddite, the
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British service explosive, and shimose, the
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Japanese powder, both supposed to be identical with the
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original melinite; Brugere's powder, a mixture of 54 parts of ammonium picrate and 45 parts of saltpetre; Designolle's powder, composed of potassium picrate, saltpetre and
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charcoal; and emmensite, invented by Stephen Emmens, of the
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United States It may be detected by the addition of an aqueous solution of potassium
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cyanide, with which it gives a
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violet-red coloration, due to the formation of isopurpuric acid . R . Anschutz (Ber., 1884, 17, p . 439) estimates picric acid by precipitation with acridine .

End of Article: PICRIC ACID, or TRINITROPHENOL, C6H2
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