Phenyl salicylate
Phenyl salicylate, or salol, is the organic compound with the formula C6H5O2C6H4OH. It is a white solid. It is occasionally used in sunscreens and as an antiseptic.Production and reactions
The title compound was synthesized first in 1883 by the Polish chemist and doctor Marceli Nencki and then independently in 1885 by the German chemist Richard Seifert . It is synthesized by heating salicylic acid with phenol in the presence of phosphoryl chloride. It also arises from heating salicylic acid:
The conversion entails dehydration and decarboxylation. Heating phenyl salicylate in turn gives xanthone.
In this conversion, phenol is produced as well as carbon dioxide.Salol reaction
In the salol reaction, phenyl salicylate reacts with o-toluidine in 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene at elevated temperatures to the corresponding amide o-salicylotoluide. Salicylamides are a type of drug.Medical
It has been used as an antiseptic based on the antibacterial activity upon hydrolysis in the small intestine.
It acts as a mild analgesic.History
The Swiss physician Hermann Sahli sought a substitute for sodium salicylate, which was used as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis but which wasn't tolerated by some patients. So Dr. Sahli asked the Polish chemist and doctor Marceli Nencki of Bern, Switzerland, if he knew of a salicylate compound that lacked sodium salicylate's side effects. Nencki recommended phenyl salicylate, which he had synthesized circa 1883. While Nencki had been investigating how phenyl salicylate behaved in the body, he hadn't published his findings. Meanwhile, the German chemist Richard Seifert , a student of the German chemist Rudolf Wilhelm Schmitt , independently synthesized phenyl salicylate in 1885. In 1885, Seifert accepted a position at the Heyden chemical corporation of Radebeul, Germany, which manufactured salicylic acid. The United States granted to Nencki and Seifert a patent for the production of phenyl salicylate, whereas Germany granted a patent for its production to Nencki and the Heyden corporation. The Heyden company subsequently sold phenyl salicylate as a pharmaceutical, under the commercial name "Salol", a contraction of "SALicylate of phenOL". Among other applications, Salol was used as an orally administered antiseptic for the small intestine, where the compound is hydrolyzed into salicylic acid and phenol.