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Potassium acetate

Colourless soluble salt of acetic acid


Colourless soluble salt of acetic acid

| (0.1 C) | (10 C) | (25 C) | (40 C) | (96 C) | (15 C) | (73.4 C) | NFPA-H = 1 | NFPA-F = 1 | NFPA-R = 1 | NFPA-S = | Potassium formate | Potassium propionate | Lithium acetate | Sodium acetate | Calcium acetate | Rubidium acetate Potassium acetate (also called potassium ethanoate), () is the potassium salt of acetic acid. It is a hygroscopic solid at room temperature.

Preparation

It can be prepared by treating a potassium-containing base such as potassium hydroxide with acetic acid:

:

This sort of reaction is known as an acid-alkali reaction.

At saturation, the sesquihydrate in water solution () begins to form the semihydrate () at 41.3 C.

Applications

Deicing

Potassium acetate (as a substitute for calcium chloride or magnesium chloride) can be used as a deicer to remove ice or prevent its formation. It offers the advantages over chlorides of being less aggressive on soils and much less corrosive: for this reason, it is one of the preferred substances for removal of ice from airplanes and airport runways.

Fire extinguishing

Potassium acetate is the extinguishing agent used as a component in some Class K fire extinguishers because of its ability to cool and form a crust over burning oils.

Food additive

Potassium acetate is used in processed foods as a preservative and acidity regulator. In the European Union, it is labeled by the E number E261; it is also approved for usage in the USA, Australia, and New Zealand.

Medicine and biochemistry

In molecular biology, potassium acetate is used to precipitate Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and SDS-bound proteins to allow their removal from DNA.

Potassium acetate is used in mixtures applied for tissue preservation, fixation, and mummification. Most museums today use a formaldehyde-based method recommended by Kaiserling in 1897 which contains potassium acetate. This process was used to soak Lenin's corpse.

Industry

Potassium acetate is used as a catalyst in the production of polyurethanes.

Use in executions

Potassium acetate was incorrectly used in place of potassium chloride when putting a prisoner to death in Oklahoma in January 2015. Charles Frederick Warner was executed on January 15, 2015 with potassium acetate; this was not public knowledge until the scheduled execution of Richard Glossip was called off.

In August 2017, the U.S. state of Florida used potassium acetate (intentionally) in the execution of Mark James Asay.

Historical

Potassium acetate is used as a diuretic and urinary alkalizer. Before modern chemistry, it was variously called terra foliata tartari, sal Sennerti, tartarus regeneratus, arcanum tartari and sal diureticus. In 1760 it was used in the preparation of Cadet's fuming liquid , the first organometallic compound ever produced.

References

References

  1. {{Sigma-Aldrich
  2. (1919). "Solubilities of Inorganic and Organic Compounds". Van Nostrand.
  3. "Potassium acetate". Chemister.
  4. (1 February 1930). "Solutions of salts in pure acetic acid. II. Solubilities of acetates". Journal of the American Chemical Society.
  5. {{nist
  6. "SDS - Potassium acetate". Thermo Fisher Scientific.
  7. (April 2023). "Deicing performance of common deicing agents for winter maintenance with and without corrosion-inhibiting substances". Cold Regions Science and Technology.
  8. (1992). "Handbook of test methods for evaluating chemical deicers.". Strategic Highway Research Program, National Research Council.
  9. (May 2016). "SDS - Class K liquid agent for extinguishers". Amerex.
  10. "Current EU approved additives and their E Numbers". UK Food Standards Agency.
  11. "Listing of Food Additives Status Part II". US Food and Drug Administration.
  12. (8 September 2011). "Standard 1.2.4 - Labelling of ingredients". Australia-New Zealand Food Standards Code.
  13. Dale Ulmer. (1994). "Fixation. The Key to Good Tissue Preservation". Journal of the International Society for Plastination.
  14. Nagorski, Andrew. (18 September 2007). "The Greatest Battle: Stalin, Hitler, and the Desperate Struggle for Moscow That Changed the Course of World War II". Simon and Schuster.
  15. "Acetic Acid".
  16. (8 October 2015). "Oklahoma used wrong drug in Charles Warner's execution, autopsy report says". The Guardian.
  17. (8 October 2015). "Oklahoma Used The Wrong Drug To Execute Charles Warner". NPR.
  18. (3 June 2018). "Florida executes convicted killer Mark Asay using new drug". Sun Sentinel.
  19. Crosland, Maurice P.. (2004-01-01). "Historical Studies in the Language of Chemistry". Courier Corporation.
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