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Thiourea

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Thiourea Basic information

Product Name:
Thiourea
Synonyms:
  • Thiourea, reagent grade, ACS
  • Thiourea 5g [62-56-6]
  • Thiourea(TU)
  • AKOS BBS-00004390
  • SULFOUREA
  • THIO
  • THIOCARBAMIDE
  • THIOUREA DIOXID
CAS:
62-56-6
MF:
CH4N2S
MW:
76.12
EINECS:
200-543-5
Product Categories:
  • Pyridines
  • Chemical intermediate
  • Organics
  • ACS Grade
  • Bioactive Small Molecules
  • Building Blocks
  • Cell Biology
  • Chemical Synthesis
  • Core Bioreagents
  • Essential Chemicals
  • General Reagents
  • Inorganic Salts
  • Life Science Reagents for Protein Electrophoresis
  • Organic Building Blocks
  • Inorganic Chemicals
  • Protein Electrophoresis
  • Proteomics
  • Research Essentials
  • SDS-PAGE
  • Solutions and Reagents
  • Sulfur Compounds
  • T
  • Thioureas
  • Urea
  • corrosion inhibitor
Mol File:
62-56-6.mol
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Thiourea Chemical Properties

Melting point:
170-176 °C (lit.)
Boiling point:
263.89°C (estimate)
Density 
1.405
refractive index 
1.5300 (estimate)
storage temp. 
Store below +30°C.
solubility 
water: soluble137g/L at 20°C
form 
Crystals
pka
-1.0(at 25℃)
color 
White to almost white
Specific Gravity
1.406
Odor
Odorless
PH Range
5 - 7
PH
6-8 (50g/l, H2O, 20℃)
Water Solubility 
13.6 g/100 mL (20 ºC)
Merck 
14,9367
BRN 
605327
Stability:
Stable. Incompatible with strong acids, strong bases, strong oxidizing agents, metallic salts, proteins, hydrocarbons. May react violently with acrolein.
InChIKey
UMGDCJDMYOKAJW-UHFFFAOYSA-N
LogP
-1.050 (est)
CAS DataBase Reference
62-56-6(CAS DataBase Reference)
NIST Chemistry Reference
Thiourea(62-56-6)
IARC
3 (Vol. Sup 7, 79) 2001
EPA Substance Registry System
Thiourea (62-56-6)
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Safety Information

Hazard Codes 
Xn,N,Xi
Risk Statements 
22-40-51/53-63-43-38
Safety Statements 
36/37-61
RIDADR 
UN 2811 6.1/PG 3
WGK Germany 
2
RTECS 
YU2800000
Autoignition Temperature
440 °C Dust
TSCA 
Yes
HazardClass 
6.1
PackingGroup 
III
HS Code 
29309070
Hazardous Substances Data
62-56-6(Hazardous Substances Data)
Toxicity
LD50 orally in wild Norway rats: 1830 mg/kg (Dieke)

MSDS

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Thiourea Usage And Synthesis

Description

Thiourea appears as white crystal/powder, is combustible, and on contact with fire, gives off irritating or toxic fumes/gases. Thiourea is a reducing agent used primarily in the production of bleached recycled pulp. In addition, it is also effective in the bleaching of stone groundwood, pressurised groundwood. Thiourea undergoes decomposition on heating and produces toxic fumes of nitrogen oxides and sulphur oxides. It reacts violently with acrolein, strong acids, and strong oxidants. The main application of thiourea is in textile processing and also is commonly employed as a source of sulphide. Thiourea is a precursor to sulphide to produce metal sulphides, for example, mercury sulphide, upon reaction with the metal salt in aqueous solution. The industrial uses of thiourea include production of flame-retardant resins and vulcanisation accelerators. Thiourea is used as an auxiliary agent in diazo paper, light-sensitive photocopy paper, and almost all other types of copy paper. Thiourea is used in many industrial applications, including as a chemical intermediate or catalyst, in metal processing and plating, and in photoprocessing.

Chemical Properties

Thiourea consists of colorless, lustrous crystals or powder with a bitter taste.

Chemical Properties

white crystals or powder

Uses

Chaotropic agent; strong denaturant. Increases solubility and recovery of proteins

Uses

Used in determination of bismuth.

Uses

Thiourea is used in the manufacture of resins,as a vulcanization accelerator, and as aphotographic fixing agent and to removestains from negatives.

Uses

The most common uses for thiourea have been for the production of thiourea dioxide (30%), in leaching of gold and silver ores (25%), in diazo papers (15%), and as a catalyst in the synthesis of fumaric acid (10%) (IARC 2001). It has also been used in the production and modification of synthetic resins. Other uses of thiourea are as a photographic toning agent, in hair preparations, as a drycleaning agent, in the synthesis of pharmaceuticals and pesticides, in boiler-water treatment, and as a reagent for bismuth and selenite ions. It has also been used in textile and dyeing auxiliaries, in the production of industrial cleaning agents (e.g., for photographic tanks and metal surfaces in general), for engraving metal surfaces, as an isomerization catalyst in the conversion of maleic to fumaric acid, in copper-refining electrolysis, in electroplating, and as an antioxidant. Other uses have included as a vulcanization accelerator, an additive for slurry explosives,as a viscosity stabilizer for polymer solutions, and as a mobility buffer in petroleum extraction. It is also used as an ingredient of consumer silver polishes (HPD 2009), and has been used in the removal of mercury from wastewater by chlorine-alkali electrolysis (IARC 1974, 2001, WHO 2003).

Uses

The product is wildly used in pharmaceutical industry, agricultural, chemicals, metallurgical industry, petroleum and so on. It is also main material for producing thiourea dioxide(CH1N2O2S).

Uses

In animal glue liquifiers and silver tarnish removers. Photographic fixing agent and to remove stains from negatives; manufacture of resins; vulcanization accelerator; a reagent for bismuth, selenite ions.

Production Methods

Thiourea is formed by heating ammonium thiocyanate at 170 °C (338 °F). After about an hour, 25% conversion is achieved. With HCl, thiourea forms thiourea hydrochloride; with mercuric oxide, thiourea forms a salt; and with silver chloride, it forms a complex salt.

Definition

A colorless crystalline organic compound (the sulfur analog of urea). It is converted to the inorganic compound ammonium thiocyanate on heating. It is used as a sensitizer in photography and in medicine.

Definition

thiourea: A white crystalline solid,(NH2)2CS; r.d. 1.4; m.p. 182°C. It isused as a fixer in photography.

Preparation

Thiourea is manufactured by heating ammonium thiocyanate at 140-145??C for about 4 hours; equilibrium is established when about 25% of the thiocyanate is converted to thiourea.Thiourea may also be prepared by the interaction of cyanamide and hydrogen sulphide:

Thiourea closely resembles urea in that reaction with formaldehyde gives methylol derivatives and then resinous condensates which on continued heating yield network structures. Thiourea-formaldehyde resins are slower curing than urea-formaldehyde resins and the hardened products are more brittle and more water-resistant. At one time thiourea-formaldehyde resins were added to urea-formaldehyde resins to give mouldings and laminates with improved water-resistance. These mixed resins have now been largely superseded by melamine-formaldehyde resins which give products with better resistance to heat.

Definition

ChEBI: The simplest member of the thiourea class, consisting of urea with the oxygen atom substituted by sulfur.

General Description

White or off-white crystals or powder. Sinks and mixes with water.

Air & Water Reactions

Water soluble.

Reactivity Profile

Thiocarbamide is a white crystalline material or powder, toxic, carcinogenic. When heated to decomposition Thiocarbamide emits very toxic fumes of oxides of sulfur and oxides of nitrogen. Violent exothermic polymerization reaction with acrylaldehyde (acrolein) [MCA SD-85, 1961], violent decomposition of the reaction product with hydrogen peroxide and nitric acid [Bjorklund G. H. et al., Trans. R. Soc. Can.,1950, 44, p. 28], spontaneous explosion upon grinding with potassium chlorate [Soothill, D., Safety Management, 1992, 8(6), p. 11].

Hazard

A questionable carcinogen. May not be used in food products (FDA); skin irritant (allergenic).

Health Hazard

Poisonous inhaled or swallowed. Irritating to skin; may cause allergic skin eruptions.

Health Hazard

The acute oral toxicity of thiourea in mostanimals is of low order. The oral LD50 values reported in the literature show variation.Symptoms of chronic effects in rats includebone marrow depression and goiters. Administration of 32.8 mol of thiourea in chickembryos on day 17 of incubation resultedin the accumulation of parabronchial liquidin those embryos (Wittman et al. 1987). Theinvestigators have attributed such changes tothe toxic effects of thiourea, rather to than aretardation of pulmonary development.
Dedon and coworkers (1986) observed thepossible protective action of thiourea againstplatinum toxicity. Thiourea and other sulfur-containing nucleophiles have the ability tochelate and remove platinum from biochemical sites of toxicity.
Oral administration of thiourea resultedin tumors in the liver and thyroid in rats.It is carcinogenic to animals and has shownsufficient evidence.

Fire Hazard

Noncombustible solid. There is no report of any explosion resulting from reactions of thiourea. Small amounts of thiourea in contact with acrolein may polymerize acrolein, which is a highly exothermic reaction.

Agricultural Uses

Thiourea is a sulphur analogue of urea. It is a crystalline and colorless solid which is relatively insoluble in water. Thiourea, capable of breaking the dormancy of seeds, is used to stimulate seed germination. Seeds are soaked for less than 24 hours before planting.

Contact allergens

Thiourea is used as a cleaner agent for silver and cop- per, and as an antioxidant in diazo copy paper. It can induce (photo-) contact dermatitis.

Biochem/physiol Actions

Thiourea is a free radical scavenger of the peroxide radical. It was shown to inhibit lipid peroxidation and ultraviolet (UV)-induced crosslinking of collagen. Bud dormancy in plants can be inhibited by thiourea, which is used as a growth stimulator. It is also known to be used in the treatment of hyperthyroidism.

Potential Exposure

Thiourea is used as rubber antiozonant, toning agent; corrosion inhibitor; and in pharmaceutical manufacture; in the manufacture of photosensitive papers; flame-retardant textile sizes; boiler water treatment. It is also used in photography; pesticide manufacture; in textile chemicals.

Carcinogenicity

Thiourea is reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen based on sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity from studies in experimental animals.

Shipping

UN2811 Toxic solids, organic, n.o.s., Hazard Class: 6.1; Labels: 6.1-Poisonous materials, Technical Name Required. UN3077 Environmentally hazardous substances, solid, n.o.s., Hazard class: 9; Labels: 9-Miscellaneous hazardous material, Technical Name Required.

Purification Methods

Crystallise thiourea from absolute EtOH, MeOH, acetonitrile or water. Dry it under vacuum over H2SO4 at room temperature. [Beilstein 3 IV 342.]

Incompatibilities

Dust may form explosive mixture with air. Reacts violently with acrolein, strong acids (nitric acid). Incompatible with oxidizers (chlorates, nitrates, peroxides, permanganates, perchlorates, chlorine, bromine, fluorine, etc.); contact may cause fires or explosions. Keep away from alkaline materials, strong bases, strong acids, oxoacids, epoxides.

Waste Disposal

Consult with environmental regulatory agencies for guidance on acceptable disposal practices. Generators of waste containing this contaminant (≥100 kg/mo) must conform with EPA regulations governing storage, transportation, treatment, and waste disposal.

Thiourea Preparation Products And Raw materials

Preparation Products

Raw materials

ThioureaSupplier

ZIBO HAOYI ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AND TECHNOLOGY CO.,LTD Gold
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