Diphenylcarbazide


1,5-Diphenylcarbazide is a chemical compound from the group of the carbazides. It has a structural formula similar to that of diphenylcarbazone and can be easily converted into it by oxidation.

Properties

Diphenylcarbazide is a white solid that is scarcely soluble in water, but readily soluble in organic solvents like acetone, hot ethanol and acetic acid. It forms colored complex compounds with certain metal ions.
Diphenylcarbazide oxidizes to Diphenylcarbazone when exposed to light and air, turning pink in the process.

Uses

Diphenylcarbazide is used as a redox indicator and for the photometric determination of certain heavy metal ions, like those of Chromium, Mercury, Cadmium, Osmium, Rubidium, Technetium and more.
Reacting a Diphenylcarbazide with Chromium compounds, such as chromates or dichromates produces diphenylcarbazone, which forms a red-violet complex with the chromium compounds. Chromium compounds can also be determined using this method, by first oxidizing these to Chromium using an oxidizing agent. Diphenylcarbazide has also been widely used in the chemical lab to detect Mercury compounds, in a similar fashion.
The reagent is typically used either as 1% to 0.25% solution in some organic solvent, or in the form of test-strip paper for detection of heavy metals in drinking water at home. The reagent is very sensitive, with a sensitivity threshold at 0.000,000,05 g/ml for Chromium ions, and 0.000,002 g/ml for Mercury ions, that is 50 ppb and 2000 ppb, respectively.
In the beginning of the 20th century, the following procedure using the Diphenylcarbazide indicator was developed, to prove the presence of mercury in solution: One drop of the solution to be tested is deposited on a filter paper which had been dipped into a freshly prepared 1% alcoholic solution of Diphenylcarbazide. Mercury salts produce a purple spot, even in a very diluted solution. Chromates and molybdates produce the same reaction.
The major drawback of the test is the deterioration of stock solution of Diphenylcarbazide in different solvents. Thus, it needs to be freshly prepared. To avoid this problem, a solution has been found in the publication by Urone in 1955. Accordingly, non-aqueous Ethyl acetate and acetone were the better solvents, Diphenylcarbazide solutions of which are stable for months. Diphenylcarbazide solutions of Methyl ethyl ketone, methyl cellosolve, and Isopropyl alcohol are usable for 1-2 weeks. Aqueous solutions and solvents tending to be basic such as methanol and ethanol, and those containing traces of water and basic impurities, do not make good solvents for stock solutions of the colorimetric reagent

Synthesis

At least 16 different routes to synthesizing the compound are known, most of which use Phenylhydrazine. An example of such a chemical reaction is the reaction between Phenylhydrazine and Urea to produce 1,5-Diphenylcarbazide in about 96% yield