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Nitrate esters from polyols

Olah and co-workers ° conducted a comprehensive study into the use of N-nitropyridinium salts for nitration. Such salts are easily prepared from the slow addition of the appropriate heterocyclic base to an equimolar suspension of nitronium tetrafluoroborate in acetonitrile. Olah studied the effect on nitration of changing both the structure of the heterocyclic base and the counter ion. Three of these salts (20, 21, 22) illustrated above have been synthesized and used for the 0-nitration of alcohols with success. Transfer nitrations with Al-nitropyridinium salts are particularly useful for the preparation of nitrate esters from acid-sensitive alcohols and polyols because conditions are essentially neutral. [Pg.95]

Henry reactions have been extensively exploited for the synthesis of nitrate ester explosives. The condensation of nitroalkanes with aldehydes, followed by esterification of the hydroxy groups with nitric acid, leads to a number of nitrate ester explosives (see Chapter 3). The two examples given above (166 and 167) are synthesized from the C-nitration of the polyols obtained from the condensation of formaldehyde with nitromethane and nitroethane respectively. [Pg.46]

Figure 6.43 Mechanism of formation of nitrate esters. Either formation of the nitronium ion or its reaction with alcohols, can be rate determining. Nitrate ester formation under industrial conditions of nitration is reversible, so products from homogeneous solutions of polyols reflect thermodynamics. Figure 6.43 Mechanism of formation of nitrate esters. Either formation of the nitronium ion or its reaction with alcohols, can be rate determining. Nitrate ester formation under industrial conditions of nitration is reversible, so products from homogeneous solutions of polyols reflect thermodynamics.
Nitrates, nitro and nitroso compounds may be explosive, especially if more than one nitro group is present. Alcohols and polyols can form highly explosive nitrate esters (e.g., nitroglycerine) from reaction with nitric acid. [Pg.107]


See other pages where Nitrate esters from polyols is mentioned: [Pg.92]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.359]    [Pg.360]    [Pg.913]    [Pg.913]    [Pg.18]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.359 ]




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