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Merck

36184

Oxamyl

PESTANAL®, analytical standard

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About This Item

Empirical Formula (Hill Notation):
C7H13N3O3S
CAS Number:
Molecular Weight:
219.26
UNSPSC Code:
41116107
NACRES:
NA.24
PubChem Substance ID:
EC Number:
245-445-3
Beilstein/REAXYS Number:
2212753
MDL number:
Technical Service
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grade

analytical standard

Quality Level

product line

PESTANAL®

shelf life

limited shelf life, expiry date on the label

technique(s)

HPLC: suitable, NMR: suitable, gas chromatography (GC): suitable

impurities

≤0.5% water (Karl Fischer)

mp

95-101 °C

suitability

passes test for identity (NMR)

application(s)

agriculture
environmental

format

neat

SMILES string

CNC(=O)O\N=C(/SC)C(=O)N(C)C

InChI

1S/C7H13N3O3S/c1-8-7(12)13-9-5(14-4)6(11)10(2)3/h1-4H3,(H,8,12)/b9-5-

InChI key

KZAUOCCYDRDERY-UITAMQMPSA-N

Application

Refer to the product′s Certificate of Analysis for more information on a suitable instrument technique. Contact Technical Service for further support.

Legal Information

PESTANAL is a registered trademark of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany


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pictograms

Skull and crossbonesEnvironment

signalword

Danger

Hazard Classifications

Acute Tox. 2 Inhalation - Acute Tox. 2 Oral - Acute Tox. 4 Dermal - Aquatic Acute 1 - Aquatic Chronic 1

Storage Class

6.1A - Combustible acute toxic Cat. 1 and 2 / very toxic hazardous materials

wgk

WGK 3

flash_point_f

Not applicable

flash_point_c

Not applicable

ppe

Eyeshields, Faceshields, Gloves, type P3 (EN 143) respirator cartridges



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T J Strathmann et al.
Environmental science & technology, 35(12), 2461-2469 (2001-07-04)
The degradation of two oxime carbamate pesticides, oxamyl and methomyl, was investigated in anoxic solutions containing various metal ions and reducing agents. In reagent-free solutions, these carbamates degrade slowly via base-catalyzed elimination. Rates of carbamate degradation are accelerated by Fe(II)
Rachel K Osborn et al.
Pest management science, 66(3), 253-261 (2009-10-29)
The potential for enhanced degradation of the carbamoyloxime nematicides aldicarb and oxamyl and the organophosphate fosthiazate was investigated in 35 UK agricultural soils. Under laboratory conditions, soil samples received three successive applications of nematicide at 25 day intervals. The second
Timothy J Strathmann et al.
Environmental science & technology, 36(23), 5172-5183 (2003-01-14)
The reduction of oxamyl and related oxime carbamate pesticides (OCPs; methomyl and aldicarb) by FeII is an important pathway for the degradation of these compounds in soil and groundwater. A series of batch kinetic experiments was carried out to assess