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The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives - Sciencemadness Dot Org

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170 AROMATIC NITRO COMPOUNDS<br />

acid <strong>and</strong> trinitrocresol, but it contains no hydroxyl group <strong>and</strong><br />

docs not attack metals readily with the formation <strong>of</strong> dangerously<br />

explosive salts. In actual use, however, it reacts slowly with<br />

moisture <strong>and</strong> yields some picric acid. It has been colloidcd with<br />

nitrocellulose in the form <strong>of</strong> a strip powder, flashless <strong>and</strong> <strong>of</strong> low<br />

hygroscopicity, but the powder in the course <strong>of</strong> time developed<br />

enough picric acid to stain the fingers <strong>and</strong> to give a yellow solution<br />

with water. Its relatively low melting point, 67-68°, gives it<br />

an advantage over picric acid for certain purposes. Methyl alcohol<br />

is needed for its synthesis, <strong>and</strong> the present availability <strong>of</strong><br />

this substance cheaply from high-pressure synthesis further<br />

commends it. While anisol is an expensive raw material, <strong>and</strong> has<br />

the further disadvantage that its direct nitration is dangerous,<br />

trinitroanisol may be prepared, without it, economically <strong>and</strong><br />

easily from benzene through the use <strong>of</strong> dinitrochlorobenzene.<br />

Trinitroanisol was prepared by Cahours 88 in 1849 by the direct<br />

nitration <strong>of</strong> anisol, <strong>and</strong> the same process has been studied more<br />

recently by Broadbent <strong>and</strong> Sparre. 04 <strong>The</strong> strongly ortho-para<br />

orienting methoxy group promotes substitution greatly, the first<br />

products <strong>of</strong> the nitration are explosive, <strong>and</strong> the temperature <strong>of</strong><br />

the reaction mixture during the first stages ought never to be<br />

allowed to rise above 0°. A small drop <strong>of</strong> anisol, or <strong>of</strong> phenetol<br />

or other aromatic-aliphatic ether, added to 10 cc. <strong>of</strong> nitric acid<br />

(d. 1.42) in a test tube <strong>and</strong> shaken, causes a remarkable series <strong>of</strong><br />

color changes; the liquid turns yellow, then green, then blue, <strong>and</strong><br />

finally reddish purple. A batch <strong>of</strong> anisol which was being nitrated<br />

at ordinary temperature in the author's laboratory detonated<br />

without warning <strong>and</strong> without provocation while showing a bluishpurple<br />

color. Small pieces <strong>of</strong> the 2-liter flask which had contained<br />

the mixture were propelled so violently that they punctured the<br />

plate-glass windows <strong>of</strong> the laboratory without, however, breaking<br />

or cracking them.<br />

Trinitroanisol may also be prepared by the interaction <strong>of</strong><br />

methyl iodide <strong>and</strong> silver picrate, <strong>and</strong> by the nitration <strong>of</strong> anisic<br />

acid, during which the carboxyl group is lost, but the most convenient<br />

method appears to be that <strong>of</strong> Jackson 70 <strong>and</strong> his collaborators<br />

by which a methoxy group is substituted for chlorine in a<br />

nucleus already nitrated. A methyl alcohol solution <strong>of</strong> picryl<br />

68 Ann., 69, 236 (1849).<br />

69 Eighth Intern. Congr. Appl. Chem., 4, 15 (1912).<br />

70 Am. Chem. J., 20, 448 (1898); 23, 294 (1901).

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