n-Butyllithium CAS 109-72-8
Introduction:Basic information about n-Butyllithium CAS 109-72-8, including its chemical name, molecular formula, synonyms, physicochemical properties, and safety information, etc.
n-Butyllithium Basic informationChemical Properties Uses Identifying Procedures Warnings and precautions Category Explosivity characteristics Flammability characertistics Storage Extinguisher
| Product Name: | n-Butyllithium |
| Synonyms: | butyl-lithiu;Lithiumn-butyl;LITHIUM-1-BUTANIDE;LITHIUMBUTYL;N-BULI;N-BUTYLLITHIUM;Butyllithium solution;ButyllithiuminhexaneM |
| CAS: | 109-72-8 |
| MF: | C4H9Li |
| MW: | 64.06 |
| EINECS: | 203-698-7 |
| Product Categories: | Organometallics;Alkyl Metals;Classes of Metal Compounds;Grignard Reagents & Alkyl Metals;Li (Lithium) Compounds;Synthetic Organic Chemistry;Typical Metal Compounds;metal alkyl;Alkyl;Chemical Synthesis;Organic Bases;Organolithium;Organometallic Reagents;Synthetic Reagents;Metal Compounds;109-72-8 |
| Mol File: | 109-72-8.mol |
n-Butyllithium Chemical Properties
| Melting point | -95 °C |
| Boiling point | 80 °C |
| density | 0.68 g/mL at 20 °C |
| vapor pressure | 163 hPa ( 20 °C) |
| Fp | 10 °F |
| storage temp. | 2-8°C |
| solubility | Miscible with diethyl ether and cyclohexane. |
| form | liquid |
| color | yellow |
| Specific Gravity | 0.695 |
| Odor | Odor of the solvent |
| explosive limit | 1.2-7.8% (v/v) |
| Water Solubility | vigorous reaction |
| Sensitive | Air & Moisture Sensitive |
| Hydrolytic Sensitivity | 8: reacts rapidly with moisture, water, protic solvents |
| BRN | 1209227 |
| Exposure limits | ACGIH: TWA 50 ppm (Skin) OSHA: TWA 500 ppm(1800 mg/m3) NIOSH: IDLH 1100 ppm; TWA 50 ppm(180 mg/m3) |
| InChI | 1S/C4H9.Li/c1-3-4-2;/h1,3-4H2,2H3; |
| InChIKey | MZRVEZGGRBJDDB-UHFFFAOYSA-N |
| SMILES | [Li]CCCC |
| LogP | 1.25-2.31 |
| CAS DataBase Reference | 109-72-8(CAS DataBase Reference) |
| NIST Chemistry Reference | Butyl lithium(109-72-8) |
| EPA Substance Registry System | Lithium, butyl- (109-72-8) |
Safety Information
| Hazard Codes | F,C,N |
| Risk Statements | 14/15-17-34-48/20-51/53-62-65-67-63-35-11-15-50/53-66 |
| Safety Statements | 6-9-16-26-36/37/39-45-61-62-6A-46-43B-43-60-33-29-5 |
| RIDADR | UN 3399 4.3/PG 1 |
| WGK Germany | 3 |
| F | 3-10 |
| Autoignition Temperature | 240°C |
| TSCA | TSCA listed |
| HazardClass | 4.3 |
| PackingGroup | I |
| HS Code | 29319090 |
| Storage Class | 4.2 - Pyrophoric and self-heating hazardous materials |
| Hazard Classifications | Aquatic Chronic 2 Asp. Tox. 1 Eye Dam. 1 Flam. Liq. 2 Pyr. Liq. 1 Skin Corr. 1B STOT SE 3 Water-react 1 |
| Toxicity | There is little toxicity data available for thebutyllithiums; for data on ether and hydrocarbonsolvents, see the appropriate LCSSs. |
| Chemical Properties | n-Butyllithium is a Colorless or slightly yellow transparent liquid at room temperature, also comes in powder form. Boiling point is 80-90℃(0.013Pa), relative density is 0.68-0.70. Soluble in many organic solvents. Stable in room temperature, lithium hydride removable by heating. Disintegrates in water, soluble in hydrocarbons and ethers, forms complex compounds with ethers, amines, and sulfides, and uses N-hexane as a solvent. |
| Uses | N-Butyllithium solution is mostly used as a pharmaceutical intermediate to synthesize anionic polymerization initiator. It is also used to produce rubber (such as integral rubber SIBR, which is the most versatile diene rubber to date), fragrance, liquid crystal materials, and other industries. It is a chemical product intermediate, linking agent, alkylating agent, and polymerization catalyst. As a catalyst, N-Butyllithium is widely used as a pharmaceutical intermediate, liquid crystal monomer, and pesticide production catalyst. N-Butyllithium is also widely used in organic syntheses, especially in growing carbon chains, and it is a staple laboratory product in reactions such as: 1) Metallization reaction: R-H + n-Butyl-Li → R-Li + Butane, in which the produced lithium alkyl can react with many substances. 2) Direct metallization: the aromatic compound that connects the substitute reacts with N-Butyllithium, and lithium metal can be attached to the aromatic compound. 3) Nucleophilic addition and substitution reaction. 4) Halogen-metal replacement. |
| Identifying Procedures | N-Butyllithium must be calibrated through single titration as follows: 1) Titration solution: 1mol/L SEC butanol/dimethylbenzene solution (butanol and dimethylbenzene must be dried with an activated 5A molecular sieve) 2) Indicator: 2,2’-dipyridine 3) Solvent: dimethylbenzene (must be dried with an activated 5A molecular sieve). 4) Operation method: Under the protection of argon, add magneton, 20ml dimethylbenzene and a small amount of indicator into a 100ml 3-lipped bottle with a tipping plug. Then use a precisely marked 2ml injector to swiftly transfer 2ml N-Butyllithium into the bottle (the air in the injector must be replaced with argon, which must then be expelled when collecting the N-Butyllithium; fill and drain the injector in the N-Butyllithium multiple times to prevent any water or air from remaining in the injector). The system should turn a purplish red. Then, wash, dry, and rinse the same injector with titration solution 2-3 times (to prevent any change in the amount added) and titrate the solution until the system turns yellow, and cease titration. 5) Repeat titration once; if the percent error between the two times is within 2%, the result can be regarded as correct. 6) Titration result: titration solution (ml)/2 to obtain N-Butyllithium concentration. |
| Warnings and precautions | 1) N-Butyllithium is extremely combustible when in contact with air; when measuring, the needle of the injector will eject sparks. 2) The entire process must be protected by argon for safety precaution. 3) If N-Butyllithium catches fire, it must be extinguished with sand, which must be placed within arm’s reach at all times. When preparing and using N-Butyllithium, do not operate alone in case of emergency |
| Category | Spontaneously combustible when in contact with water |
| Explosivity characteristics | May explode in combination with phenylethylene |
| Flammability characertistics | Combusts in air at a concentration abover 20%; combusts upon contact with water and carbon dioxide; flammable when in contact with heat and open flame. |
| Storage | Store in ventilated, cool and dry spaces; must be waterproof and carbon dioxide-proof. |
| Extinguisher | Dry powder |
| Chemical Properties | n-Butyllithium is a colorless crystalline solid or clear yellow solution. Due to its high reactivity and extreme solubility, even in its impurities, it is commonly thought to be a viscous liquid. |
| Uses | n-Butyllithium is used as a polymerization initiator in the production of elastomers like polybutadiene and styrene- butadiene- styrene. As a strong base, it is utilized in the synthesis of organic compounds. It undergoes thermal decomposition to prepare 1-butene. |
| Uses | n-Butyllithium is a strong nucleophile in the synthetic organic chemistry. It is also used as an initiator in the polymerization process. |
| Definition | ChEBI: Butyllithium is an alkyllithium compound. |
| Preparation | Industrially, n-butyllithium is produced by thereaction of n-butyl chloride with lithium metal dispersion in various hydrocarbon solvents.Hexane is the most commonly used solvent. Up to one-half of the lithium is replaced withsodium in order to lower the cost of the butyllithium and increase the reactivity of the dispersion.The reaction is carried out below the boiling point of the solvent. The laboratory procedure is essentially the same except that pentane and diethyl etherare two of the more popular solvents. The preparation runs smoothly in ether at lowertemperatures but the product must either be used immediately or kept refrigerated due tothe rapid cleavage of ether by n-butyllithium. |
| Flammability and Explosibility | The risk of fire or explosion on exposure of butyllithium solutions to the atmospheredepends on the identity of the organolithium compound, the nature of the solvent,the concentration of the solution, and the humidity. t-Butyllithium solutions are themost pyrophoric and may ignite spontaneously on exposure to air. Dilute solutions(1.6 M, 15% or less) of n-butyllithium in hydrocarbon solvents, although highlyflammable, have a low degree of pyrophoricity and do not spontaneously ignite.Under normal laboratory conditions (25 °C, relative humidity of 70% or less),solutions of -20% concentration will usually not ignite spontaneously on exposure toair. More concentrated solutions of n-butyllithium (50 to 80%) are most dangerousand will immediately ignite on exposure to air. Contact with water or moist materialscan lead to fires and explosions, and the butyllithiums also react violently withoxygen. |
| storage | Inparticular, butyllithium should be stored and handled in areas free of ignitionsources, and containers of butyllithium should be stored under an inert atmosphere.Work with butyllithium should be conducted in a fume hood under an inert gas suchas nitrogen or argon. Safety glasses, impermeable gloves, and a fire-retardantlaboratory coat are required. |
| Incompatibilities | The butyllithiums are extremely reactive organometallic compounds. Violentexplosions occur on contact with water with ignition of the solvent and of the butaneproduced. t-Butyllithium will ignite spontaneously in air. The butyllithiums ignite oncontact with water, carbon dioxide, and halogenated hydrocarbons. Thebutyllithiums are incompatible with acids, halogenated hydrocarbons, alcohols, andmany other classes of organic compounds. |
| Waste Disposal | Excess butyllithium solution can be destroyed by dilution with hydrocarbon solvent to a concentration ofapproximately 5 wt %, followed by gradual addition to water with vigorous stirring under an inertatmosphere. Alternatively, the butyllithium solution can be slowly poured (transfer by cannula for s- or tbutyllithium)into a plastic tub or other container of powdered dry ice. The residues from the above procedures and excess butyllithium should be placed in an appropriatecontainer, clearly labeled, and handled according to your institution's waste disposal guidelines. |
n-Butyllithium Preparation Products And Raw materials
| Raw materials | Hexane-->Lithium-->1-Bromobutane-->1-Chlorobutane |
| Preparation Products | 2-Cyanophenylboronic acid-->2-Bromopyridine-5-boronic acid-->1-BENZOTHIOPHENE-2-SULFONYL CHLORIDE-->4-Hydroxyphenylboronic acid-->5-Methoxypyridine-3-boronic acid-->2,3-Difluorophenylboronic acid-->5-Bromopyridine-3-boronic acid-->2-BROMOPYRIDIN-3-YLBORONIC ACID-->GRANISETRON-D3-->Ethyl 1-methyl-1H-pyrazole-5-carboxylate-->4-METHYLDIBENZOTHIOPHENE-->(4-METHOXYPHENYL)-BORANE-->4,5-DIBROMOTHIOPHENE-2-CARBOXALDEHYDE-->4-Carboxylphenylboronic acid pinacol ester-->2,5-Dichlorophenylboronic acid-->5-BROMOPYRIDINE-2-CARBONYL CHLORIDE-->4-N-BUTYLTOLUENE-->1-Naphthylboronic acid-->2,3,6-TRIFLUOROBENZOIC ACID-->5-Chloropyridine-2-boronic acid-->TRIS(PENTAFLUOROPHENYL)BORANE-->4-CHLORO-2-METHYLPHENYLBORONIC ACID-->3-ISOPROPYLPHENYLBORONIC ACID-->2-Bromo-5-iodopyridine-->2-Chloropyridine-5-boronic acid-->3,4,5-TRICHLOROTHIOPHENE-2-CARBONYL CHLORIDE-->5-Methyl-2-pyridineboronic acid-->3-BROMO-1-BENZOFURAN-->2,4-Dibromothiophene-->1-Methyl-1H-pyrazole-5-carboxylic acid-->2,3,4-Tribromothiophene-->2,4,6-Trifluorobenzoic acid-->METHYL 3-BROMOTHIOPHENE-2-CARBOXYLATE-->2,4,6-Trichlorobenzoic acid-->DIMETHYL(3-PHENOXY-2-OXOPROPYL)PHOSPHONATE-->Benzofuran-2-boronic acid-->ETHYL 5-CHLOROTHIOPHENE-2-CARBOXYLATE-->Isoquinoline-4-carbaldehyde-->Fenarimol-->1,3-Thiazole-2-carbaldehyde |
