Identification | More | [Name]
Red prussiate | [CAS]
13746-66-2 | [Synonyms]
AMMONIACAL POTASSIUM FERRICYANIDE FERRIC POTASSIUM CYANIDE FERRICYANIDE, POTASSIUM FERRICYANPOTASSIUM POTASSIUM FERRICYANATE POTASSIUM FERRICYANIDE POTASSIUM FERRICYANIDE AMMONIACAL POTASSIUM FERRICYANIDE REAGENT POTASSIUM HEXACYANOFERRATE POTASSIUM HEXACYANOFERRATE(+3) POTASSIUM HEXACYANOFERRATE(III) potassium hexacyanoferrate(ii) trihyrate POTASSIUM IRON(III)CYANIDE POTASSIUM PRUSSIATE RED Potassiun ferrocyanide RED PRUSSIATE RED PRUSSIATE POTASH Tetrapotassium hexacyanoferrate trihydrate ferrate(3-),hexakis(cyano-kappa-c)-,tripotassium,(oc-6-11) hexacyano-ferrate(3-tripotassium | [EINECS(EC#)]
237-323-3 | [Molecular Formula]
C6FeK3N6 | [MDL Number]
MFCD00011392 | [Molecular Weight]
329.24 | [MOL File]
13746-66-2.mol |
Chemical Properties | Back Directory | [Appearance]
orange to red crystals | [Melting point ]
°Cd ec.) | [density ]
1.85
| [vapor pressure ]
0Pa at 20℃ | [storage temp. ]
Store at RT. | [solubility ]
H2O: 1 M at 20 °C, complete, orange-brown
| [form ]
fine crystals
| [color ]
Orange to red | [Specific Gravity]
1.88 | [Odor]
Odorless | [PH]
6-9 (25℃, 1M in H2O) | [PH Range]
6 - 9 at 329 g/l at 25 °C | [Stability:]
Stable. Incompatible with ammonia, strong acids, strong oxidizing agents. Reaction with acids yields toxic gas. May discolour on exposure to light. | [Water Solubility ]
464 g/L (20 ºC) | [Sensitive ]
Light Sensitive | [Merck ]
14,7630 | [Exposure limits]
ACGIH: TWA 1 mg/m3 NIOSH: IDLH 25 mg/m3; TWA 1 mg/m3 | [InChIKey]
MIMJFNVDBPUTPB-UHFFFAOYSA-N | [Uses]
Also known as red prussiate of potash, this deep red crystal
was made by passing chlorine gas through a solution of potassium
ferrocyanide. The crystals are soluble in water but less
so in alcohol. Potassium ferricyanide was used with ferric ammonium citrate to sensitize paper for the cyanotype
process and mixed with hypo to make Farmer’s reducer which
was used to reduce the density of silver-based images. | [CAS DataBase Reference]
13746-66-2(CAS DataBase Reference) | [EPA Substance Registry System]
13746-66-2(EPA Substance) |
Safety Data | Back Directory | [Hazard Codes ]
Xn | [Risk Statements ]
R32:Contact with acids liberates very toxic gas. R20/21/22:Harmful by inhalation, in contact with skin and if swallowed . | [Safety Statements ]
S36:Wear suitable protective clothing . | [RIDADR ]
UN 3077 9 / PGIII | [WGK Germany ]
2
| [RTECS ]
LJ8225000
| [F ]
8 | [TSCA ]
Yes | [HS Code ]
28372000 | [Safety Profile]
Moderately toxic by
ingestion. Not as toxic as the simple
cyanides. Mutation data reported. Explosive
reaction with ammonia, chromium trioxide
(above 196°C), sodtum nitrite + heat.
Violent reaction with Cu(NO3)2. Mixtures
with chromium trioxide + silver grains ignite with friction. When heated to
decomposition or on contact with acid or
acid fumes it emits hghly toxic fumes of
K2O and CN-. Used as a fmative in
photography, as a metal cleaner, and for
glass coatings. |
Hazard Information | Back Directory | [Hazard]
Decomposes on strong heating to evolve
highly toxic fumes, but the compound itself has
low toxicity.
| [Chemical Properties]
Also known as red potassium prussiate and red prussiate of potash, K3Fe(CN)6 is poisonous, bright red,water-soluble crystals that decompose when heated. Used in calico printing and wool dyeing.
| [Application]
It is used in many amperometric biosensors as an electron transfer agent replacing an enzyme's natural electron transfer agent with the enzyme glucose oxidase. It is a major component of Murakami's etchant for cemented carbides. | [Definition]
ChEBI: Potassium hexacyanoferrate(3-) is a potassium salt and a hexacyanoferrate(3-) salt. | [Production Methods]
The oxidation of ferrocyanide yields potassium ferricyanide.
Potassium ferricyanide is used as a chemical reagent and in
metallurgy, photography, and pigments. | [General Description]
Potassium hexacyanoferrate(III) (Potassium ferricyanide) is an alkali hexacyanoferrate. On heating, it undergoes decomposition to afford yellow-brown hexacyanoiron(III) acid. It can be prepared by the anodic oxidation of K4[Fe(CN)6]. | [Flammability and Explosibility]
Notclassified | [Purification Methods]
It has been recrystallised repeatedly from hot water (1.3mL/g) and dried under vacuum in a desiccator. |
Questions And Answer | Back Directory | [Description]
Red prussiate (IUPAC name Potassium hexacyanoferrate(III), also known as red prussiate of Potash, Prussian red, and potassium ferricyanide) occurs as bright red crystals which are soluble in water. Potassium ferricyanide is manufactured by passing chlorine into a solution of potassium ferrocyanide. It is not considered to be toxic but is dangerous when heated or mixed with other chemicals.
Potassium ferricyanide is used to prepare Prussian Blue, the deep blue pigment in blue printing. It is used for the testing for ferrous ions. Potassium ferricyanide is widely used as an oxidizing agent in photographic processing to remove silver from negatives and positives, a process called dot etching. In color photograph, potassium ferricyanide is used to reduce the size of color dots without reducing their number, as a kind of manual color correction. Potassium ferricyanide is often used in physiological experiments as a means of increasing a solutions redox potential (Eo 436 mV at pH 7). Potassium ferricyanide is applied to harden iron and steel, in electroplating, dyeing wool and as a laboratory reagent. It is a mild oxidizing agent used in organic synthesis. It is associated with potassium hydroxide solution used to formulate Murakami‘s etchant, which is useful for metallographers to provide contrast between binder and carbide phases in cemented carbides. Further, it is used in many amperometric biosensors as an electron transfer agent replacing an enzyme's natural electron transfer agent such as oxygen with the enzyme glucose oxidase. It is an active ingredient in blood glucose meters used by diabetics. Potassium ferricyanide can be used as chromogenic reagent for the determination of captopril, the first orally active angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, which is applied for the treatment of hypertension, coronary heart disease and congestive heart failure in clinical medicine.
| [Uses]
Potassium ferricyanide (Prussian Red) is an orange solid, It is mainly used as a pigment for staining or in photography, but also in analytical chemistry for its oxidizing properties.
Potassium ferricyanide(III) is a potassium salt widely employed as an external indicator in potassium dichromate titrations. A sensor containing potassium ferricyanide assisted enzyme electrode for estimating maltose and glucose in samples has been reported. Addition of potassium ferricyanide in the catholyte can improve the generation of power in microbial fuel cells (MFCs).
| [Metabolism]
Inhalation of 2000 mg/m3 of potassium ferricyanide by rats and mice led to accumulations of ferricyanide in the blood and urine by the first day. Almost total excretion of potassium ferricyanide took place via urine by the first day after administration (STN, 1999a).
Hantson and coworkers (1996) reported that no reliable data concerning the bioavailability of potassium ferricyanide seems to exist while the bioavailability of cyanide from hexacyanoferrate, which was investigated in humans, was very poor.
| [References]
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potassium_ferricyanide
[2] Shi Lei Wang, Min Wang, Quan Min Li (2009) Application of potassium ferricyanide in the spectrophotometric determination of captopril, Chinese Chemical Letters, 20, 88-91
[3] M. Pandurangachar, B. E. Kumara Swamy,B. N.Chandrashekar, Ongera Gilbert, Sathish Reddy, B. S.Sherigara (2010), Electrochemical Investigations of Potassium Ferricyanide and Dopamine by 1-butyl-4-methylpyridinium tetrafluoro borate Modified Carbon Paste Electrode: A Cyclic Voltammetric Study, 5, 1187-1202
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