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Encyclopedia > Hydrocyanic acid
Properties

General

Chemical name Hydrogen cyanide
Chemical formula HCN (H-C≡N:)
Appearance Colorless liquid and gas
CAS number 74-90-8

Chemical structure of hydrogen cyanide

Physical

Molecular mass 27.03 g/mol
Melting point -13 °C
Boiling point 26 °C
Density 0.687 g/ml (liquid)
Solubility Miscible with water

Thermochemistry

ΔfH0gas 135.14 kJ/mol
ΔfH0liquid 109 kJ/mol
ΔfH0solid 100 kJ/mol
S0gas, 1 bar 201.82 J/mol·K
S0liquid, 1 bar 113.01 J/mol·K
S0solid ? J/mol·K

Safety

Ingestion Extremely toxic. Early symptoms include nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain.
Inhalation Extremely dangerous. Early symptoms include slow breathing rate, irritation.
Skin Poisoning is thought to be possible through the skin.
Eyes Dilated pupils are a symptom of poisoning.
More info Hazardous Chemical Database (http://ull.chemistry.uakron.edu/erd/chemicals/7/6581.html)

Except where noted, all data was produced under conditions of standard temperature and pressure.

Hydrogen cyanide is a chemical compound with chemical formula H-C≡N. A solution of hydrogen cyanide in water is called hydrocyanic acid or prussic acid. Pure hydrogen cyanide is a colorless, very poisonous, and highly volatile liquid that boils sligthly above room temperature at 26 °C, thereby generating hydrogen cyanide gas. Hydrogen cyanide has a faint, bitter, almond-like odor that some people are unable to smell due to a genetic trait. Hydrogen cyanide is weakly acidic and partly converts to the cyanide ion CN in aqueous solution, resulting in a colorless volatile liquid with the typical a hydrogen cyanide odor. The salts of hydrogen cyanide are known as cyanides.


Hydrogen cyanide is produced in large quantities all over the world by the chemical industry where it is used in tempering steel, dyeing, explosives, engraving, the production of acrylic resin plastic, and other organic chemical products. It can be produced by reacting a cyanide salt with a strong acid, or directly from ammonia and carbon monoxide.


Fruits that have a pit, such as cherries or apricots, often contain small quantities of hydrogen cyanide in the pit. Bitter almonds, from which almond oil and flavoring is made, also contain hydrogen cyanide. Hydrogen cyanide is contained in the exhaust of vehicles, in tobacco smoke, and in the smoke of burning nitrogen-containing plastics.


An HCN concentration of 300 parts per million of air will kill a human within a few minutes. The toxicity is caused by the cyanide ion. The mechanism of this toxicity, and the uses of the poison, are described on the cyanide page. Hydrogen cyanide (under the brand name Zyklon B) was perhaps most infamously employed by the Nazi regime in Germany as a method of mass-execution.


Hydrogen cyanide forms a foul tasting compound when it combines with tobacco smoke. For this reason, some chemists choose to have a lit cigarette in their mouth while they are working with it, as they receive an early warning against possible cyanide poisoning.


Hydrogen cyanide gas in air is explosive at concentrations over 56,000 ppm.


Reactions

  1. hydrogen cyanide + ketone or aldehydecyanohydrin

  Results from FactBites:
 
Acid - LoveToKnow 1911 (1562 words)
Other acids became known during the alchemistic period; and the first attempt at a generalized conception of these substances was made by Paracelsus, who supposed them to contain a principle which conferred the properties of sourness and solubility.
A polybasic acid contains more than one atom of hydrogen which is replaceable by metals; moreover, in such an acid the replacement may be entire with the formation of normal salts, partial with the formation of acid salts, or by two or more different metals with the formation of compound salts (see Salts).
An important oxidation synthesis of aromatic acids is from hydrocarbons with aliphatic side chains; thus toluene, or methylbenzene, yields benzoic acid, the xylenes, or dimethyl-benzene, yield methyl-benzoic acids and phthalic acids.
Prussic Acid - LoveToKnow 1911 (3634 words)
The free acid is a colourless liquid with a smell resembling bitter almonds; it boils at 26.1° C., and may be solidified, in which condition it melts at -14° C. It burns with a blue flame,.
It is a tetrabasic acid, of markedly acid character, and readily decomposes carbonates and acetates.
Hydrocyanic acid is a protoplasmic poison, directly lethal to all living tissues, whether in a plant or an animal.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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