| Urea | |
|---|---|
| General | |
| Systematic name | Diaminomethanal |
| Other names | ? |
| Molecular formula | (NH2)2CO |
| SMILES | NC(=O)N |
| Molar mass | 60.07 g/mol |
| Appearance | white odourless solid |
| CAS number | |
| Properties | |
| Density and phase | 750 kg/m3 |
| Solubility in water | 108 g/100 ml (20 °C) 167 g/100 ml (40 °C) 251 g/100 ml (60 °C) 400 g/100 ml (80 °C) 733 g/100 ml (100 °C) |
| Melting point | 132.7 °C (406 K) decomposes |
| Boiling point | n.a. |
| Acidity (pKa) | 0.18 |
| Basicity (pKb) | 13.82 |
| Chiral rotation | Not chiral |
| Viscosity | ? cP at ? °C |
| Critical relative humidity | 81% (20°C) 73% (30°C) |
| Heat of solution in water | -57,8 cal/g (endothermic) |
| Nitrogen content | 46,6 %N |
| Structure | |
| Molecular shape | ? |
| Coordination geometry | trigonal planar |
| Crystal structure | ? |
| Dipole moment | ? D |
| Hazards | |
| MSDS | J.T. Baker |
| Main hazards | ? |
| Flash point | ? °C |
| R/S statement | R: ? S: ? |
| RTECS number | ? |
| Supplementary data page | |
| Structure & properties | n, εr, etc. |
| Thermodynamic data | Phase behaviour Solid, liquid, gas |
| Spectral data | UV, IR, NMR, MS |
| Related compounds | |
| Other anions | ? |
| Other cations | ? |
| Related ? | biuret triuret thiourea |
| Related compounds | ? |
| Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 26°C, 100 kPa) Chemical infobox | |
Urea is also known as carbamide, especially in the recommended International Non-proprietary Names (rINN) in use in Europe. For example, the medicinal compound hydroxyurea (old British Approved Name) is now hydroxycarbamide. Other names include carbamide resin, isourea, carbonyl diamide, and carbonyldiamine.
Most organisms have to deal with the excretion of nitrogen waste originating from protein and amino acid catabolism. In aquatic organisms the most common form of nitrogen waste is ammonia , while land-dwelling organisms developed ways to convert the toxic ammonia to either urea or uric acid. Generally, birds and saurian reptiles excrete uric acid, while the remaining species, including mammals, excrete urea. Remarkably, tadpoles excrete ammonia, and shift to urea production during metamorphosis.
The urea is formed in the livers of mammals in a cyclic pathway which was initially named the Krebs-Henseleit cycle after its discoverers, and later became known simply as the urea cycle. This cycle was partially deduced by Krebs & Henseleit in 1932 and was clarified in the 1940s as the roles of citrulline and argininosuccinate as intermediates were understood.
In this cycle, amino groups donated by ammonia and L-aspartate are converted to urea , while L-ornithine , citrulline , L-arginino-succinate , and L-arginine act as intermediates.
Despite the generalization above, the pathway has been documented not only in mammals and amphibians, but in many other organisms as well, including birds, invertebrates, insects, plants, yeast, fungi, and even microorganisms .
Humans produce a little uric acid as a result of purine breakdown. Excess uric acid production can lead to a type of arthritis known as gout.
Urea is essentially a waste product; it has no physiological function. It is dissolved in blood (in humans in a concentration of 2.5 - 7.5 mmol/liter) and excreted by the kidney in the urine.
In addition, a small amount of urea is excreted (along with sodium chloride and water) in human sweat.
Urea is produced commercially from synthetic ammonia and carbon dioxide. Urea can be produced as prills, granules, flakes, pellets, crystals and solutions.
More than 90% of world production is destined for use as a fertilizer. Urea has the highest nitrogen content of all solid nitrogeneous fertilizers in common use. (46.4%N.) It therefore has the lowest transportation costs per unit of nitrogen nutrient.
Urea is highly soluble in water and is therefore also very suitable for use in fertilizer solutions (in combination with ammonium nitrate: UAN), e.g. in “foliar feed’ fertilizers.
Solid urea is marketed as prills or granules. The advantage of prills is that in general they can be produced more cheaply than granules which, because of their narrower particle size distribution have an advantage over prills if applied mechanically to the soil. Properties such as impact strength, crushing strength and free-flowing behaviour are particularly important in product handling, storage and bulk transportation.
Production Urea is produced commercially from two raw materials, ammonia and carbon dioxide. Large quantities of carbon dioxide are produced during the manufacture of ammonia from coal or from hydrocarbons such as natural gas and petroleum derived raw materials. This allows direct synthesis of urea from these raw materials.
The production of urea from ammonia and carbon dioxide takes place in an equilibrium reaction, with incomplete conversion of the reactants. The various urea processes are characterized by the conditions under which urea formation takes place and the way in which unconverted reactants are further processed.
Unconverted reactants can be used for the manufacture of other products, for example ammonium nitrate or sulphate, or they can be recycled for complete conversion to urea in a total-recycle process.
Two principal reactions take place in the formation of urea from ammonia and carbon dioxide. The first reaction (2NH3 + CO2 --> H2N-CO-NH3OH (ammonium carbamate)) is exothermic and the second reaction (H2N-CO-NH3OH (ammonium carbamate) --> H2N-CO-NH2 + H2O) is endothermic. Both reactions combined are exothermic.
Similar bacteria species to H. pylori can be identified by the same test in animals (apes, dogs, cats - including big cats).
Nitrogen metabolism | functional groups
Urea | Urinstof | Harnstoff | Urea | اوره | Urée | Urea | שתנן | Ureum | 尿素 | Urea | Mocznik | Uréia | Мочевина | Urea | Urea | Urê | Üre | 尿素