Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Vinylacetylene

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Appearance
  
colourless gas

Molar mass
  
52.07456 g/mol

Pubchem
  
12720

Flash point
  
< −5 °C (23 °F; 268 K)

Formula
  
C4H4

Boiling point
  
5.01 °C

Solubility in water
  
low

Main hazards
  
flammable

Vinylacetylene httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons33

Vinylacetylene is the organic compound with the formula C4H4. The colourless gas was once used in the polymer industry. It is composed of both alkyne and alkene groups.

Contents

Vinylacetylene eXe

Vinylacetylene is extremely dangerous because in high enough concentrations (typically > 30 mole percent, but pressure dependent) it can auto-detonate (explode without air being present) especially at elevated pressures, such as those seen in chemical plants processing C4 hydrocarbons. An example of such an explosion occurred at a Union Carbide plant in Texas City in 1969.

Vinylacetylene Experimental and computational study of the ultraviolet photolysis

Synthesis

Vinylacetylene was first synthesized by Hofmann elimination of the related quaternary ammonium salt:

[(CH3)3NCH2CH=CHCH2N(CH3)3]I2 → 2 [(CH3)3NH]I + HC≡C-CH=CH2
Vinylacetylene Vinylacetylene Wikipedia

It is usually synthesized by dehydrohalogenation of 1,3-dichloro-2-butene. It also arises via the dimerization of acetylene or dehydrogenation of 1,3-butadiene.

Application

Vinylacetylene Vinylacetylene C4H4 ChemSpider

At one time, chloroprene (2-chloro-1,3-butadiene), an industrially important monomer, was produced via the intermediacy of vinyl acetylene. In this process, acetylene is dimerized to give vinyl acetylene, which is then combined with hydrogen chloride to give 4-chloro-1,2-butadiene via 1,4-addition. This allene derivative which, in the presence of cuprous chloride, rearranges to 2-chloro-1,3-butadiene:

H2C=CH-C≡CH + HCl → H2ClC-CH=C=CH2H2ClC-CH=C=CH2 → H2C=CH-CCl=CH2
Vinylacetylene vinyl acetylene Kovats Retention Index

References

Vinylacetylene Wikipedia