Everything about Phenol totally explained
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Phenol, also known under an older name of
carbolic acid, is a toxic, colourless
crystalline
solid with a sweet tarry odor. Its
chemical formula is
C6H5OH and its structure is that of a
hydroxyl group (-OH)
bonded to a
phenyl ring; it's thus an
aromatic compound.
Phenols
The word
phenol is also used to refer to any compound that contains a six-membered
aromatic ring, bonded directly to a
hydroxyl group (-OH). In effect, phenols are a class of
organic compounds of which the phenol discussed in this article is the simplest member.
Properties
Phenol has a limited
solubility in water (8.3 g/100 ml). It is slightly acidic: The phenol molecule has weak tendencies to lose the H
+ ion from the hydroxyl group, resulting in the highly water-soluble
phenoxide anion C
6H
5O
−. Compared to
aliphatic alcohols, phenol shows much higher acidity; it even reacts with
aqueous NaOH to lose H
+, whereas
aliphatic alcohols do not. One explanation for the increased acidity is
resonance stabilization of the phenoxide anion by the aromatic ring. In this way, the negative charge on oxygen is shared by the ortho and para carbon atoms. In another explanation, increased acidity is the result of orbital overlap between the oxygen's lone pairs and the aromatic system. In a third, the dominant effect is the
induction from the
sp² hybridised carbons; the comparatively more powerful inductive withdrawal of electron density that's provided by the sp² system compared to an sp³ system allows for great stabilization of the oxyanion. In making this conclusion, one can examine the
pKa of the
enol of
acetone, which is 10.9 in comparison to phenol with a pK
a of 10.0.
Production
Phenol can be made from the partial
oxidation of
benzene or
benzoic acid, by the
cumene process, or by the
Raschig process. It can also be found as a product of
coal oxidation.
Uses
Phenol has
antiseptic properties, and was used by Sir
Joseph Lister (1827-1912) in his pioneering technique of antiseptic surgery, though the skin irritation caused by continual exposure to phenol eventually led to the substitution of aseptic (germ-free) techniques in surgery. Lister decided that the wounds themselves had to be thoroughly cleaned. He then covered the wounds with a piece of lint covered in carbolic acid. It is also the active ingredient in some oral anesthetics such as
Chloraseptic spray. Phenol was also the main ingredient of the
Carbolic Smoke Ball, a device marketed in London in the 19th century as protecting the user against influenza and other ailments. In the early part of the 20th century, it was used in the
Battle Creek Sanitarium to discourage
female masturbation by applying it to the clitoris.
It is also used in the production of drugs (it is the starting material in the industrial production of
aspirin),
herbicides, and
synthetic resins (
Bakelite, one of the first synthetic resins to be manufactured, is a
polymer of phenol with
formaldehyde). Exposure of the
skin to concentrated phenol solutions causes
chemical burns which may be severe; in
laboratories where it's used, it's usually recommended that
polyethylene glycol solution is kept available for washing off splashes. Washing with large amounts of plain
water (most labs have a safety shower or eye-wash) and removal of contaminated clothing are required, and immediate
hospital treatment for large splashes. This is particularly important if the phenol is mixed with
chloroform(a commonly-used mixture in molecular biology for
DNA &
RNA purification from proteins).
It is also used in
cosmetic surgery as an
exfoliant, to remove layers of dead skin. It is also used in
phenolization, a surgical procedure used to treat an
ingrown nail, in which it's applied to the toe to prevent regrowth of
nails. 5% Phenol is sometimes injected near a sensory nerve in order to temporarily (up to a year) stop it transmitting impulses in some intractable cases of
chronic neuropathic pain.
Second World War
Injections of phenol have occasionally been used as a means of rapid
execution. In particular, phenol was used as a means of extermination by the
Nazis before and during the
Second World War. Originally used by the
Nazis in the 1930's as part of its
euthanasia program, phenol, cheap and easy to make and quickly effective, became the injectable drug of choice on through the last days of the War. Though
Zyklon-B pellets were used in the gas chambers to exterminate large groups of people, the
Nazis learned that extermination of smaller groups was more economical via injection of each victim one at a time with phenol instead. Phenol injections were given to thousands of people in
concentration camps, especially at
Auschwitz-Birkenau. Injections were administered by
medical doctors, their
assistants, or sometimes prisoner doctors; such injections were originally given
intravenously, more commonly in the
arm, but injection directly into the
heart, so as to induce nearly instant
death, was later preferred
. One of the most famous inmates at Auschwitz to be executed by carbolic acid injection was
St. Maximilian Kolbe, a Catholic priest who volunteered to undergo three weeks of starvation and dehydration in the place of another inmate and who was finally injected with carbolic acid so that the Nazis could make more room in their holding cells. . This discovery made in 2007 may be relevant to the
origin of life question as phenol is a fragment of the biomolecule
tyrosine. However, as tyrosine is known to result directly from hydroxylation of phenylalanine in modern biological systems, the implications of prebiotic phenol are questionable at best.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Phenol'.
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