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16794-12-0

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16794-12-0 Usage

General Description

1-Butanesulfonic acid is a sulfonic acid with the molecular formula C4H9SO3H. This clear, colorless liquid is used as a reagent in organic synthesis and as a mobile phase modifier in high-performance liquid chromatography. It is also used as an acid catalyst in certain chemical reactions and as a stabilizer in electroplating solutions. 1-Butanesulfonic acid is highly soluble in water, ethanol, and diethyl ether, and is considered to be a strong acid. It is also known by the names butylsulfonic acid and butane-1-sulfonic acid, and it is commonly used in the production of various pharmaceuticals and other organic compounds.

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 16794-12-0 includes 8 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 5 digits, 1,6,7,9 and 4 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 1 and 2 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 16794-12:
(7*1)+(6*6)+(5*7)+(4*9)+(3*4)+(2*1)+(1*2)=130
130 % 10 = 0
So 16794-12-0 is a valid CAS Registry Number.
InChI:InChI=1/C4H10O3S/c1-3-4(2)8(5,6)7/h4H,3H2,1-2H3,(H,5,6,7)

16794-12-0SDS

SAFETY DATA SHEETS

According to Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) - Sixth revised edition

Version: 1.0

Creation Date: Aug 17, 2017

Revision Date: Aug 17, 2017

1.Identification

1.1 GHS Product identifier

Product name 1-BUTANESULFONIC ACID

1.2 Other means of identification

Product number -
Other names -

1.3 Recommended use of the chemical and restrictions on use

Identified uses For industry use only.
Uses advised against no data available

1.4 Supplier's details

1.5 Emergency phone number

Emergency phone number -
Service hours Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm (Standard time zone: UTC/GMT +8 hours).

More Details:16794-12-0 SDS

16794-12-0Downstream Products

16794-12-0Relevant articles and documents

Foldamers as reactive sieves: Reactivity as a probe of conformational flexibility

Smaldone, Ronald A.,Moore, Jeffrey S.

, p. 5444 - 5450 (2008/02/04)

A series of m-phenyleneethynylene (mPE) oligomers modified with a dimethylaminopyridine (DMAP) unit were treated with methyl sulfonates of varying sizes and shapes, and the relative reactivities were measured by UV spectrophotometry. Using a small-molecule DMAP analogue as a reference, each of the methyl sulfonates was shown to react at nearly identical rate. In great contrast, oligomers that are long enough to fold, and hence capable of binding the methyl sulfonate, experience rate enhancements of 18-1600-fold relative to that of the small-molecule analogue, depending on the type of alkyl chain attached to the guest. Three different oligomer lengths were studied, with the longest oligomers exhibiting the fastest rate and greatest substrate specificity. Even large, bulky guests show slightly enhanced methylation rates compared to that with the reference DMAP, which suggests a dynamic nature to the oligomer's binding cavity. Several mechanistic models to describe this behavior are discussed.

Mechanisms of hydrolysis and related nucleophilic displacement reactions of alkanesulfonyl chlorides: pH dependence and the mechanism of hydration of sulfenes

King,Lam,Skonieczny

, p. 1743 - 1749 (2007/10/02)

pH-rate profiles, primary kinetic isotope effects, deuterium substitution patterns, and pH-product ratios in the presence of added nucleophiles provide evidence for the following overlapping set of mechanisms for the hydrolysis of methanesulfonyl chloride (1) (in 0.1 M KCl at 25 °C): (a) pH ≤ 1-6.7, reaction with water by direct nucleophilic attack on the sulfonyl chloride; (b) pH ≥ 6.7-11.8, rate-determining attack by hydroxide anion to form sulfene (2), which is then trapped by water in a fast step; and (c) pH ≥ 11.8, sulfene formation and sulfene trapping by hydroxide anion; careful inspection showed no sign of sulfene formation in the reaction with water or of direct displacement by hydroxide anion. This pattern, with appropriate variations in the values of pHi (the pH at which two competing mechanisms have the same rate), is apparently general for simple alkanesulfonyl chlorides having at least one hydrogen on the carbon bearing the sulfonyl group. Azide and acetate anions react with 1 below pHi for 1 (6.7) by direct nucleophilic substitution at the sulfur, but above pHi by trapping of the sulfene. 2-Chlorophenoxide anion reacts with 1 below pH 6.7 by both (a) direct displacement to form the ester and (b) elimination to form the sulfene. Above pH 6.7, sulfene is formed from the sulfonyl chloride by reaction with either 2-chlorophenoxide or hydroxide ion; this is followed by trapping of the sulfene with 2-chlorophenoxide, water, or hydroxide. The possibility of the 2-chlorophenoxide anion acting as a general base promoting the reaction of water with either 1 and 2 was examined, but no sign of either process was detected.

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