Anthracene

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Anthracene
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Template:Longitem Template:Chembox Elements/molecular formula
Molar mass Template:Chem molar mass
Appearance Colorless
Odor Weak aromatic
Density 1.28 g/cm3 (25 °C)[1]
0.969 g/cm3 (220 °C)
Melting point Template:Chembox CalcTemperatures
Boiling point Template:Chembox CalcTemperatures
Solubility Soluble in alcohol, (C2H5)2O, acetone, C6H6, CHCl3,[1] CS2[3]
Solubility in ethanol 0.76 g/kg (16 °C)
19 g/kg (19.5 °C)
3.28 g/kg (25 °C)[3]
Solubility in methanol 18 g/kg (19.5 °C)[3]
Solubility in hexane 3.7 g/kg[3]
Solubility in toluene 9.2 g/kg (16.5 °C)
129.4 g/kg (100 °C)[3]
Solubility in carbon tetrachloride 7.32 g/kg[3]
log P 4.56
Vapor pressure 0.01 kPa (125.9 °C)
0.1 kPa (151.5 °C)[4]
13.4 kPa (250 °C)[5]
Template:Longitem 0.0396 L·atm/mol[6]
UV-vismax) 345.6 nm, 363.2 nm[5]
Template:Longitem −129.8Template:E cm3/mol[7]
Thermal conductivity 0.1416 W/(m·K) (240 °C)
0.1334 W/(m·K) (270 °C)
0.1259 W/(m·K) (300 °C)[8]
Viscosity 0.602 cP (240 °C)
0.498 cP (270 °C)
0.429 cP (300 °C)[8]
Template:Longitem Monoclinic (290 K)[9]
Template:Longitem P21/b[9]
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a = 8.562 Å, b = 6.038 Å, c = 11.184 Å[9]
α = 90°, β = 124.7°, γ = 90°
Template:Longitem 210.5 J/(mol·K)
Template:Longitem 207.5 J/(mol·K)
Template:Longitem 129.2 kJ/mol
Template:Longitem 7061 kJ/mol[5]
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Anthracene is a solid polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) of formula C14H10, consisting of three fused benzene rings. It is a component of coal tar. Anthracene is used in the production of the red dye alizarin and other dyes, as a scintillator to detect high energy particles, as production of pharmaceutical drugs. Anthracene is colorless but exhibits a blue (400–500 nm peak) fluorescence under ultraviolet radiation.[11]

History and etymology

Crude anthracene (with a melting point of only 180°) was discovered in 1832 by Jean-Baptiste Dumas and Auguste Laurent[12] who crystalized it from a fraction of coal tar later known as "anthracene oil". Since their (inaccurate) measurements showed the proportions of carbon and hydrogen of it to be the same as in naphthalene, Laurent called it paranaphtaline in his 1835 publication of the discovery,[13] which is translated to English as paranaphthalene.[12] Two years later, however, he decided to rename the compound to its modern name derived from Template:Langx because after discovering other polyaromatic hydrocarbons he decided it was only one of isomers of naphthalene.[14] This notion was disproved in 1850s and 1860s.[15][16]

Occurrence and production

Anthracene, as many other polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, is generated during combustion processes. Most human exposure is through tobacco smoke or ingestion of charred food.

The mineral form of anthracene is called freitalite and is related to a coal deposit.[17] Coal tar, which contains around 1.5% anthracene, remains a major industrial source of this material. Common impurities are phenanthrene and carbazole.

A classic laboratory method for the preparation of anthracene is by cyclodehydration of o-methyl- or o-methylene-substituted diarylketones in the so-called Elbs reaction, for example from o-tolyl phenyl ketone.[18]

Reactions

Reduction

Reduction of anthracene with alkali metals yields the deeply colored radical anion salts M+[anthracene] (M = Li, Na, K). Reduction with sodium in ethanol gives 9,10-dihydroanthracene, preserving the aromaticity of the two flanking rings.[19]

Cycloadditions

In any solvent except water,[20] anthracene photodimerizes by the action of UV light:

Anthracene dimer

The dimer, called dianthracene (or sometimes paranthracene), is connected by a pair of new carbon-carbon bonds, the result of the [4+4] cycloaddition. It reverts to anthracene thermally or with UV irradiation below Script error: No such module "val".. Substituted anthracene derivatives behave similarly. The reaction is affected by the presence of oxygen.[21][22]

Anthracene also reacts with dienophile singlet oxygen in a [4+2]-cycloaddition (Diels–Alder reaction):

Diels alder reaction of anthracene with singlet oxygen
Diels alder reaction of anthracene with singlet oxygen

With electrophiles

Chemical oxidation occurs readily, giving anthraquinone, C14H8O2 (below), for example using hydrogen peroxide and vanadyl acetylacetonate.[23]

Anthraquione
Anthraquione

Electrophilic substitution of anthracene occurs at the 9 position. For example, formylation affords 9-anthracenecarboxaldehyde. Substitution at other positions is effected indirectly, for example starting with anthroquinone.[24] Bromination of anthracene gives 9,10-dibromoanthracene.[25]

Uses

Anthracene proper has application as an organic semiconductor and chemical feedstock for various preservatives and dyes.

Electronics

File:Fluorescence of Anthracene under UV light.jpg
Fluorescence of anthracene under UV light

Anthracene is a wide band-gap organic semiconductor, with an emission spectrum peaking between 400 nm and 440 nm. Organic field-effect transistors have been constructed from it. In particle physics, it is used as a scintillator to detect high-energy photons, electrons, or alpha particles.[26] Plastics, such as polyvinyltoluene, can be doped with anthracene to produce an approximately water-equivalent scintillator in radiation therapy dosimetry.

Anthracene is commonly used as a UV tracer in conformal coatings applied to printed wiring boards. The anthracene tracer allows the conformal coating to be inspected under UV light.[27]

It is also used in wood preservatives, insecticides, and coating materials.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Derivatives

File:Antracene diradical AFM2.png
False-color AFM image of anthracene diradical, where hydrogen atoms are removed at carbons 9 and 10

A variety of anthracene derivatives find specialized uses. Industrially, anthracene is converted mainly to anthraquinone, a precursor to dyes.[28] Derivatives having a hydroxyl group are 1-hydroxyanthracene and 2-hydroxyanthracene, homologous to phenol and naphthols, and hydroxyanthracene (also called anthrol, and anthracenol)[29][30] are pharmacologically active. Anthracene may also be found with multiple hydroxyl groups, as in 9,10-dihydroxyanthracene.

Some anthracene derivatives are used as pharmaceutical drugs, including bisantrene, trazitiline, and benzoctamine.


Toxicology

Many investigations indicate that anthracene is noncarcinogenic: "consistently negative findings in numerous in vitro and in vivo genotoxicity tests". Early experiments suggested otherwise because crude samples were contaminated with other polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Furthermore, it is readily biodegraded in soil. It is especially susceptible to degradation in the presence of light.[28] The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies anthracene as IARC group 2B, possibly carcinogenic to humans.[31]

See also

References

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  2. Haynes, p. 5.157
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  4. Haynes, p. 6.116
  5. a b c Anthracene in Linstrom, Peter J.; Mallard, William G. (eds.); NIST Chemistry WebBook, NIST Standard Reference Database Number 69, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg (MD)
  6. Haynes, p. 5.157
  7. Haynes, p. 3.579
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  17. Freitalite, Mindat, https://www.mindat.org/min-54360.html
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  27. Zeitler, Alex (2012-06-27) Conformal Coating 101: General Overview, Process Development, and Control Methods. BTW, Inc.
  28. a b Collin, Gerd; Höke, Hartmut and Talbiersky, Jörg (2006) "Anthracene" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. Script error: No such module "CS1 identifiers".
  29. 1-Hydroxyanthracene. NIST datapage
  30. 2-Hydroxyanthracene. NIST datapage
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Cited sources

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External links

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