Identification
CAS.No.:
350-03-8
FL.No.:
14.039
FEMA.No.:
3424
NAS.No.:
3424
CoE.No.:
2316
EINECS.No.:
206-496-7
JECFA.No.:
1316
Description
A colorless liquid with sweet, nutty, popcorn-like aroma.
Regulatory Status
CoE: Used provisionally. Bev.: 2 ppm; Food: 3 ppm
FDA: n/a
FDA (other): n/a
JECFA: ADI: Acceptable. No safety concern at current levels of intake when used as a flavoring agent (2004).
Usage
Reported uses (ppm): (FEMA, 1994)
Nonalcoholic beverages
1
2
Natural occurrence
Reported found in roasted filberts, beer, brandy, coffee, malt and wheaten bread.
Aroma
Powerful, almost choking, Cigar-tobaccotype odor, which becomes pleasant only at
extreme dilution, then also more typical
tobacco-like. In certain types of flower bases, substitutes
for flower absolutes, etc. this chemical can
produce interesting and desirable effects, Lily,
Jasmin, Tuberose, etc. are types of floral
fragrances that may benefit from this effect.
Chemical Properties
A colorless liquid with sweet, nutty, popcorn-like aroma
Chemical Properties
clear colorless to yellow liquid
Occurrence
Reported found in roasted filberts, beer, brandy, coffee, malt and wheaten bread.
Uses
Used in the fragrance industry and as an
intermediate in the synthesis of a number of clinical drugs,
including Imatinib, Mesylate, Metyrapone, Telithromycin, and
Ridogrel. An analog of nicotinamide that competes for incorporation
into NAD. It has been used to chemically lesion the inferior
olive nucleus, thereby eliminating climbing fibers within
the cerebellar cortex.
Uses
3-Acetylpyridine used as an intermediate for the synthesis of risedronate sodium, inhibitor of bone resorption. It is also used in perfumery.
Preparation
Dry distillation of calcium nicotinate with calcium acetate.
Production Methods
Produced from Ethyl nicotinate and Ethyl
acetoacetate, in principle by hydrolysis of
Aceto acetylpyridine.
Definition
It is a nicotinic acidantagonist.
Safety Profile
Poison by ingestion. Moderately toxic by intraperitoneal routeMutation data reported. A flammable liquid. When heated to decomposition emits toxic fumes of NOx,. See also KETONES
Purification Methods
It is purified by dissolving in HCl, extracting with Et2O to remove the possible impurity of nicotinic acid, basified with NaOH and extracted with Et2O. The dried extract is filtered, evaporated and the residual oil is distilled. If the NMR spectrum indicates further impurities, then convert it to the phenylhydrazone (m 137o, yellow needles from EtOH). This is hydrolysed with HCl [Engler & Kiby Chem Ber 22 597 1889], the phenylhydrazine HCl is removed by filtration, NaNO2 is added, the solution is basified with aqueous NaOH and extracted with Et2O as before and distilled at atmospheric pressure to give 3-acetylpyridine as a colourless oil. Purification can also be achieved by shaking with 50% aqueous KOH, extracting with Et2O, drying the extract and distilling it at atmospheric pressure or in vacuo. [Kloetzel & Chubb J Am Chem Soc 79 4226 1957.] The hydrochloride has m 180-181o (from MeOH/EtOH), the picrate has m 133.8-134.8o (from H2O), and the phenylhydrazone has m 137o (129-130o)(needles, from EtOH) [Webb & Webb J Am Chem Soc 71 2285 1949]. The ketoxime has m 112o (from EtOH or *C6H6). [Strong & McElvain J Am Chem Soc 55 816 1933, Kolloff & Hunter J Am Chem Soc 63 490 1941, Beilstein 21/7 V 394.]