Sodium 4-bromophenylmethanesulfonate

CAS #:

Linear Formula:

C7H6BrNaO3S

MDL Number:

MFCD11113780

ORDER

PRODUCT Product Code ORDER SAFETY DATA TECHNICAL DATA
Sodium 4-bromophenylmethanesulfonate
NA-OMX-01-P
Pricing > SDS > Data Sheet >

Sodium 4-bromophenylmethanesulfonate Properties (Theoretical)

Compound Formula C7H6BrNaO3S
Molecular Weight 273.076
Appearance White solid or powder
Melting Point N/A
Boiling Point N/A
Density N/A
Solubility in H2O N/A
Exact Mass 271.912 g/mol
Monoisotopic Mass 271.912 g/mol

Sodium 4-bromophenylmethanesulfonate Health & Safety Information

Signal Word Warning
Hazard Statements H302-H315-H319-H335
Hazard Codes Xi
Precautionary Statements P261-P280-P305 + P351 + P338
Risk Codes R22 R37/38 R41
Safety Statements S26 S36/39
RTECS Number N/A
Transport Information NONH for all modes of transport
MSDS / SDS

About Sodium 4-bromophenylmethanesulfonate

Sodium 4-bromophenylmethanesulfonate is one of numerous organometallic compounds manufactured by American Elements under the trade name AE Organometallics™. Organometallics are useful reagents, catalysts, and precursor materials with applications in thin film deposition, industrial chemistry, pharmaceuticals, LED manufacturing, and others. American Elements supplies organometallic compounds in most volumes including bulk quantities and also can produce materials to customer specifications. Please request a quote above for more information on pricing and lead time.

Sodium 4-bromophenylmethanesulfonate Synonyms

Sodium (4-bromophenyl)methanesulfonate, benzenemethanesulfonic acid, 4-bromo-, sodium salt (9ci)

Chemical Identifiers

Linear Formula C7H6BrNaO3S
MDL Number MFCD11113780
EC No. N/A
Pubchem CID 53403373
IUPAC Name sodium; (4-bromophenyl)methanesulfonate
SMILES C1=CC(=CC=C1CS(=O)(=O)[O-])Br.[Na+]
InchI Identifier InChI=1S/C7H7BrO3S.Na/c8-7-3-1-6(2-4-7)5-12(9,10)11;/h1-4H,5H2,(H,9,10,11);/q;+1/p-1
InchI Key KSRAEFLKOUHQDU-UHFFFAOYSA-M

Packaging Specifications

Typical bulk packaging includes palletized plastic 5 gallon/25 kg. pails, fiber and steel drums to 1 ton super sacks in full container (FCL) or truck load (T/L) quantities. Research and sample quantities and hygroscopic, oxidizing or other air sensitive materials may be packaged under argon or vacuum. Shipping documentation includes a Certificate of Analysis and Safety Data Sheet (SDS). Solutions are packaged in polypropylene, plastic or glass jars up to palletized 440 gallon liquid totes, and 36,000 lb. tanker trucks.

Related Elements

Bromine

See more Bromine products. Bromine (atomic symbol: Br, atomic number: 35) is a Block P, Group 17, Period 4 element. Its electron configuration is [Ar]4s23d104p5. The bromine atom has a radius of 102 pm and its Van der Waals radius is 183 pm. In its elemental form, bromine Bromine Bohr Model has a red-brown appearance. Bromine does not occur by itself in nature; it is found as colorless soluble crystalline mineral halide salts. Bromine was discovered and first isolated by Antoine Jérôme Balard and Leopold Gmelin in 1825-1826.

Sodium

Sodium Bohr ModelSee more Sodium products. Sodium (atomic symbol: Na, atomic number: 11) is a Block D, Group 5, Period 4 element with an atomic weight of 22.989769. The number of electrons in each of Sodium's shells is [2, 8, 1] and its electron configuration is [Ne] 3s1. The sodium atom has a radius of 185.8 pm and a Van der Waals radius of 227 pm. Sodium was discovered and first isolated by Sir Humphrey Davy in 1807. In its elemental form, sodium has a silvery-white metallic appearance. It is the sixth most abundant element, making up 2.6 % of the earth's crust. Sodium does not occur in nature as a free element and must be extracted from its compounds (e.g., feldspars, sodalite, and rock salt). The name Sodium is thought to come from the Arabic word suda, meaning "headache" (due to sodium carbonate's headache-alleviating properties), and its elemental symbol Na comes from natrium, its Latin name.

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