- Butanol
Butanol or butyl alcohol (sometimes also called "biobutanol" when produced biologically), is a
primary alcohol with a 4carbon structure and themolecular formula of C4H10O. It belongs to the higher alcohols and branched-chain alcohols. [ [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v451/n7174/abs/nature06450.html Non-fermentative pathways for synthesis of branched-chain higher alcohols as biofuels : Abstract : Nature ] ]It is primarily used as a solvent, as an intermediate in chemical synthesis, and as a fuel.
There are four
isomer ic structures for butanol.Isomers
The unmodified term "butanol" usually refers to the straight chain isomer with the alcohol
functional group at the terminal carbon, which is also known as "n"-butanol or 1-butanol. The straight chain isomer with the alcohol at an internal carbon is "sec"-butanol or2-butanol . The branched isomer with the alcohol at a terminal carbon is isobutanol; 2-methyl-1-propanol, and the branched isomer with the alcohol at the internal carbon is "tert"-butanol; 2-methyl-2-propanol.Butanol isomers, due to their different structures, have somewhat different melting and boiling points. All are moderately
miscible in water, less so thanethanol , and more so than the higher (longer carbon chain) alcohols. This is because all alcohols have a hydroxyl group which makes them polar which in turn tends to promote solubility in water. At the same time the carbon chain of the alcohol resists solubility in water. Methanol, ethanol and propanol, are fully miscible in water because the hydroxyl group predominates while butanol is moderately miscible because of the balance between the two opposing solubility trends.Toxicity
Like many alcohols, butanol is considered toxic. It has shown low order of toxicity in single dose experiments to laboratory animals. [ 16 ECETOC JACC No. 41 n-Butanol (CAS No. 71-36-3), European Centre for Ecotoxicology and Toxicology of Chemicals, Brussels, December 2003, pages 3-4.] [ [http://www.dow.com/productsafety/finder/nbut.htm#HealthInfo n-Butanol ] ] and is considered safe enough for use in cosmetics. Brief, repeated overexposure with the skin can result in depression of the
central nervous system , as with othershort-chain alcohol s. Exposure may also cause severe eye irritation and moderate skin irritation. The main dangers are from prolonged exposure to fumes. In extreme cases this includes suppression of the central nervous system and even death. Under most circumstances, butanol is quickly metabolized tocarbon dioxide .It has not been shown to damage DNA or causecancer .Uses
Biobutanol
Butanol is considered as a potential
biofuel (butanol fuel ). Butanol at 85 percent strength can be used in cars designed for gasoline (petrol) without any change to the engine (unlike 85% ethanol), and it contains more energy for a given volume than ethanol and almost as much as gasoline, so a vehicle using butanol would return fuel consumption more comparable to gasoline than ethanol. Butanol can also be used as a blended additive to diesel fuel to reduce soot emissions. Fact|date=June 2008Other uses
Butanol sees use as a
solvent for a wide variety of chemical and textile processes, in organic synthesis and as a chemical intermediate. It is also used as apaint thinner and a solvent in other coating applications where it is used as a relatively slow evaporating latent solvent in lacquers and ambient-cured enamels. It finds other uses such as a component of hydraulic andbrake fluid s. [ [http://www.chemicalland21.com/petrochemical/ISO-BUTANOL.htm Isobutanol at chemicalland21.com] ]It is also used as a base for
perfumes , but on its own has a highly alcoholic aroma.Salt s of butanol are chemical intermediates for examplealkali metal salts of tert-butanol are tert-butoxides.Production
Since the 1950s, most butanol in the
United States is produced commercially fromfossil fuel s. The most common process starts withpropene , which is run through anhydroformylation reaction to formbutanal , which is then reduced withhydrogen to butanol. Butanol can also be produced by fermentation ofbiomass by bacteria. Prior to the 1950s, "Clostridium acetobutylicum " was used in industrial fermentation processes producing butanol. Research in the past few decades showed results of other microorganisms that can produce butanol through fermentation.ee also
*
A.B.E. process
*Algal fuel
*Butanol fuel
*Solvent References
*"Merck Index", 12th Edition, 1575.
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