Natural Vanillin
Product Description
Product Detail
Product Name: |
Natural vanillin |
Synonyms: |
Vanillin cas:121-33-5;Eugenol EP Impurity H;VANILLINE;VANILLIC ALDEHYDE;VANILLIN;VANILLA;VANILLINUM;Vanilin |
CAS: |
121-33-5 |
MF: |
C8H8O3 |
MW: |
152.15 |
EINECS: |
204-465-2 |
Mol File: |
121-33-5.mol |
|
Melting point |
81-83 °C(lit.) |
Boiling point |
170 °C15 mm Hg(lit.) |
density |
1.06 |
vapor density |
5.3 (vs air) |
vapor pressure |
>0.01 mm Hg ( 25 °C) |
FEMA |
3107 | VANILLIN |
refractive index |
1.4850 (estimate) |
Fp |
147 °C |
storage temp. |
Refrigerator |
solubility |
methanol: 0.1 g/mL, clear |
form |
Crystalline Powder |
pka |
pKa 7.396±0.004(H2O I = 0.00 t = 25.0±1.0) (Reliable) |
color |
White to pale yellow |
PH |
4.3 (10g/l, H2O, 20℃) |
Water Solubility |
10 g/L (25 ºC) |
Sensitive |
Air & Light Sensitive |
Merck |
14,9932 |
JECFA Number |
889 |
BRN |
472792 |
Stability: |
Stable. May discolour on exposure to light. Moisture-sensitive. Incompatible with strong oxidizing agents, perchloric acid. |
CAS DataBase Reference |
121-33-5(CAS DataBase Reference) |
NIST Chemistry Reference |
Benzaldehyde, 4-hydroxy-3-methoxy-(121-33-5) |
EPA Substance Registry System |
Vanillin (121-33-5) |
Hazard Codes |
Xn,Xi |
Risk Statements |
22-36/37/38-36 |
Safety Statements |
24/25-22-37/39-26-36/37/39 |
RIDADR |
UN 2924 3/8/PG II |
WGK Germany |
1 |
RTECS |
YW5775000 |
Autoignition Temperature |
>400 °C |
TSCA |
Yes |
HazardClass |
3/8 |
PackingGroup |
II |
HS Code |
29124100 |
Hazardous Substances Data |
121-33-5(Hazardous Substances Data) |
Toxicity |
LD50 orally in rats, guinea pigs: 1580, 1400 mg/kg (Jenner) |
Chemical property |
White needle crystal, with Fragrant smell. Soluble in water of 125 times, 20 times of ethylene glycol and 2 times of 95% ethanol, insoluble in chloroform. |
Chemical Properties |
Vanillin has a characteristic, creamy, vanilla-like odor with a very sweet taste. |
Chemical Properties |
White, crystalline needles; sweetish smell. Soluble in 125 parts water, in 20 parts glycerol, and in 2 parts 95% alcohol; soluble in chloroform and ether. Combustible. |
Chemical Properties |
White or cream, crystalline needles or powder with characteristic vanilla odor and sweet taste. |
Chemical Properties |
Vanillin is found in
many essential oils and foods but is often not essential for their odor or
aroma. However, it does determine the odor of essential oils and extracts
from Vanilla planifolia and Vanilla tahitensis pods, in which it is formed
during ripening by enzymatic cleavage of glycosides. |
Occurrence |
Vanillin occurs widely in nature; it has been reported in the essential oil of Java citronella (Cymbopogon nardus Rendl.), in benzoin, Peru balsam, clove bud oil and chiefly vanilla pods (Vanilla planifolia, V. tahitensis, V. pompona); more that 40 vanilla varieties are cultivated; vanillin is also present in the plants as glucose and vanillin. Reported found in guava, feyoa fruit, many berries, asparagus, chive, cinnamon, ginger, Scotch spearmint oil, nutmeg, crisp and rye bread, butter, milk, lean and fatty fish, cured pork, beer, cognac, whiskies, sherry, grape wines, rum, cocoa, coffee, tea, roast barley, popcorn, oatmeal, cloudberry, passion fruit, beans, tamarind, dill herb and seed, sake, corn oil, malt, wort, elderberry, loquat, Bourbon and Tahiti vanilla and chicory root. |
Uses |
Vanillin is a flavorant made from synthetic or artificial vanilla which can be derived from lignin of whey sulfite liquors and is syntheti- cally processed from guaiacol and eugenol. the related product, ethyl vanillin, has three and one-half times the flavoring power of vanillin. vanillin also refers to the primary flavor ingredient in vanilla, which is obtained by extraction from the vanilla bean. vanillin is used as a substitute for vanilla extract, with application in ice cream, desserts, baked goods, and beverages at 60–220 ppm. |
Uses |
An intermediate and analytical reagent. |
Uses |
Pharmaceutic aid (flavor). As a flavoring agent in confectionery, beverages, foods and animal feeds. Fragance and flavor in cosmetics. Reagent for synthesis. Source of L-dopa. |
Uses |
The primary component of Vanilla bean extract. |
Uses |
Labelled Vanillin. Occurs naturally in a wide variety of foods and plants such as orchids; major commercial source of natural vanillin is from vanilla bean extract. Synthetically produced in-bulk fro m lignin-based byproduct of paper processes or from guaicol. |
Definition |
ChEBI: A member of the class of benzaldehydes carrying methoxy and hydroxy substituents at positions 3 and 4 respectively. |
Aroma threshold values |
Detection: 29 ppb to 1.6 ppm; recognition: 4 ppm |
Taste threshold values |
Taste characteristics at 10 ppm: sweet, typical vanilla-like, marshmallow, creamy-coumarin, caramellic with a powdery nuance. |
Air & Water Reactions |
Slowly oxidizes on exposure to air. . Slightly water soluble. |
Reactivity Profile |
Vanillin can react violently with Br2, HClO4, potassium-tert-butoxide, (tert-chloro-benzene + NaOH), (formic acid + Tl(NO3)3). . Vanillin is an aldehyde. Aldehydes are readily oxidized to give carboxylic acids. Flammable and/or toxic gases are generated by the combination of aldehydes with azo, diazo compounds, dithiocarbamates, nitrides, and strong reducing agents. Aldehydes can react with air to give first peroxo acids, and ultimately carboxylic acids. These autoxidation reactions are activated by light, catalyzed by salts of transition metals, and are autocatalytic (catalyzed by the products of the reaction). |
Fire Hazard |
Flash point data for Vanillin are not available, however Vanillin is probably combustible. |
Safety Profile |
Moderately toxic by ingestion, intraperitoneal, subcutaneous, and intravenous routes. Experimental reproductive effects. Human mutation data reported. Can react violently with Br2, HClO4, potassium-tert-butoxide, tert- chlorobenzene + NaOH, formic acid + thallium nitrate. When heated to decomposition it emits acrid smoke and irritating fumes. See also ALDEHYDES. |
Chemical Synthesis |
From the waste (liquor) of the wood-pulp industry; vanillin is extracted with benzene after saturation of the sulfite waste liquor with CO2. Vanillin is also derived naturally through fermentation. |
storage |
Vanillin oxidizes
slowly in moist air and is affected by light. |
Purification Methods |
Crystallise vanillin from water or aqueous EtOH, or by distillation in vacuo.[Beilstein 8 IV 1763.] |
Incompatibilities |
Incompatible with acetone, forming a brightly colored compound. A compound practically insoluble in ethanol is formed with glycerin. |
Regulatory Status |
GRAS listed. Included in the FDA Inactive Ingredients Database (oral solutions, suspensions, syrups, and tablets). Included in nonparenteral medicines licensed in the UK. Included in the Canadian List of Acceptable Non-medicinal Ingredients. |