Molecular Formula | C15H15ClN2O |
Molar Mass | 274.75 |
Boling Point | 438.8℃ at 760mmHg |
Storage Condition | Room Temprature |
EPA chemical information | Information provided by: ofmpub.epa.gov (external link) |
Background | In 1900, Raab accidentally discovered that acridine red (acridinered) and lightning can quickly kill paramecium, but acridine red alone or Lightning or acridine red can not kill paramecium after lightning irradiation. Acridine red is a cationic tricyclic heteroaromatic fluorescent dye. It forms a dimer in the presence of an appropriate amount of cationic surfactant sodium dodecyl sulfonate, and its self-polymerization balance is destroyed with the addition of protein. |
application | 1, acridine red-resonance fluorescence spectrometry for determination of phenol in aqueous solution 2, fluorescent dye acridine red as biological probe for determination of protein 3, acridine red fluorescence method for detection of hydroxyl radicals generated by Fenton reaction 4, acridine red photometric method for determination of antioxidant activity of water chestnut peel |
category | toxic substances |
flammability hazard characteristics | flammability; heating decomposition releases toxic nitrogen oxides and hydrogen chloride smoke |
storage and transportation characteristics | warehouse ventilation and low temperature drying |
fire extinguishing agent | dry powder, foam, sand, carbon dioxide, mist water |
toxic substance data | information provided by: pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (external link) |