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Propyne

Alkyne hydrocarbon compound with three carbon atoms


Alkyne hydrocarbon compound with three carbon atoms

Methyl acetylene Allylyne

Propyne (methylacetylene) is an alkyne with the chemical formula . It is a component of MAPD gas—along with its isomer propadiene (allene), which was commonly used in gas welding. Unlike acetylene, propyne can be safely condensed.

Production and equilibrium with propadiene

Propyne exists in equilibrium with propadiene, the mixture of propyne and propadiene being called MAPD: : The coefficient of equilibrium Keq is 0.22 at 270 °C or 0.1 at 5 °C. MAPD is produced as a side product, often an undesirable one, by cracking propane to produce propene, an important feedstock in the chemical industry. MAPD interferes with the catalytic polymerization of propene.

Laboratory methods

Propyne can also be synthesized on laboratory scale by reducing 1-propanol, allyl alcohol or acetone vapors over magnesium.

Use as a rocket fuel

European space companies have researched using light hydrocarbons with liquid oxygen, a relatively high performing liquid rocket propellant combination that would also be less toxic than the commonly used MMH/NTO (monomethylhydrazine/nitrogen tetroxide). Their research showed that propyne would be highly advantageous as a rocket fuel for craft intended for low Earth orbital operations. They reached this conclusion based upon a specific impulse expected to reach 370 s with oxygen as the oxidizer, a high density and power density—and the moderate boiling point, which makes the chemical easier to store than cryogenic fuels that must be kept at extremely low temperatures.

Organic chemistry

Propyne is a convenient three-carbon building block for organic synthesis. Deprotonation with n-butyllithium gives propynyllithium. This nucleophilic reagent adds to carbonyl groups, producing alcohols and esters. Whereas purified propyne is expensive, MAPP gas could be used to cheaply generate large amounts of the reagent.

Propyne, along with 2-butyne, is also used to synthesize alkylated hydroquinones in the total synthesis of vitamin E.

The chemical shift of an alkynyl proton and propargylic proton generally occur in the same region of the 1H NMR spectrum. In propyne, these two signals have almost exactly the same chemical shifts, leading to overlap of the signals, and the 1H NMR spectrum of propyne, when recorded in deuteriochloroform on a 300 MHz instrument, consists of a single signal, a sharp singlet resonating at 1.8 ppm.

In Astrophysics

Propyne has been detected in multiple astrophysical objects following its first observation in 1973 in the galactic center giant molecular cloud Sgr B2 using radio astronomy techniques. Propyne has been proposed to act as a precursor molecule to the formation of PAHs in space, such as indene.

Propyne has been detected by infrared spectroscopy in the chemically reducing atmospheres of the outer planets in the Solar System, including on Jupiter in 2000 and on Saturn in 1997, both using the Infrared Space Observatory; on Titan in 1981 using Voyager's IRIS instrument; and on the ice giants Uranus in 2006 and on Neptune in 2008 using the Spitzer space telescope.

Notes

References

References

  1. (2014). "Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry. IUPAC Recommendations and Preferred Names 2013 (Blue Book)". [[Royal Society of Chemistry.
  2. {{PGCH. 0392
  3. Peter Pässler, Werner Hefner, Klaus Buckl, Helmut Meinass, Andreas Meiswinkel, Hans-Jürgen Wernicke, Günter Ebersberg, Richard Müller, Jürgen Bässler, Hartmut Behringer, Dieter Mayer, "Acetylene" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry Wiley-VCH, Weinheim 2007 ({{doi. 10.1002/14356007.a01_097.pub2).
  4. (1895). "The Action of Magnesium Upon the Vapors of the Alcohols and a New Method of Preparing Allylene". Journal of the Franklin Institute.
  5. Reiser, Edward II.. (1896). "The preparation of Allylene, and the Action of Magnesium upon Organic Compounds". The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science.
  6. (2004). "Green propellants options for launchers, manned capsules and interplanetary missions". [[German Aerospace Center.
  7. (1990). "Ethyl Isocrotonate".
  8. "Processes for preparing alkynyl ketones and precursors thereof".
  9. (1969). "Cyclization of Acetylenic Compounds". Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English.
  10. (2015-08-26). "Organic chemistry". W. H. Freeman.
  11. (May 1973). "Interstellar Methylacetylene and Isocyanic Acid". Nature Physical Science.
  12. (2019-03-06). "On the formation and the isomer specific detection of methylacetylene (CH3CCH), propene (CH3CHCH2), cyclopropane (c-C3H6), vinylacetylene (CH2CHCCH), and 1,3-butadiene (CH2CHCHCH2) from interstellar methane ice analogues". Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics.
  13. (2000). "Jupiter's hydrocarbons observed with ISO-SWS: vertical profiles of C2H6 and C2H2, detection of CH3C2H".
  14. (1997-05-01). "First results of ISO-SWS observations of Saturn: detection of CO2, CH3C2H, C4H2 and tropospheric H2O.". Astronomy and Astrophysics.
  15. (August 1981). "C3H8 and C3H4 in Titan's atmosphere". Nature.
  16. (2006-10-01). "Detection of new hydrocarbons in Uranus' atmosphere by infrared spectroscopy". Icarus.
  17. (2008-10-01). "First Spitzer observations of Neptune: Detection of new hydrocarbons". Icarus.
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