Why Does NaHCO3 Help Dissolve Aspirin?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the chemical interaction between sodium hydrogencarbonate (NaHCO3) and acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) in aqueous solution, exploring why this interaction aids in the dissolution of aspirin. The scope includes theoretical and chemical reasoning related to solubility and acid-base reactions.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant inquires about the mechanism by which sodium hydrogencarbonate aids in the dissolution of aspirin, noting its presence in soluble aspirin tablets.
  • Another participant explains that NaHCO3 can deprotonate acetylsalicylic acid, resulting in a carboxylate anion that is more soluble in water compared to the uncharged acid form.
  • A third participant provides a reaction scheme illustrating the deprotonation process, indicating that the reaction produces carbon dioxide and water, which may contribute to the dissolution process.
  • A fourth participant reiterates the initial inquiry and draws a parallel to the reaction between benzoic acid and sodium hydrogencarbonate, suggesting a similar mechanism may apply.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants present various explanations and reactions related to the dissolution process, but there is no explicit consensus on the complete mechanism or the implications of the reactions discussed.

Contextual Notes

The discussion does not address potential limitations or assumptions in the proposed mechanisms, nor does it clarify the stability of intermediates or the specific conditions under which these reactions occur.

josephcollins
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Hi ppl,
I was wondering could someone help me with this explanation. Why does the addition of Sodium Hydrogencarbonate help an aspirin to dissolve. In tablets of aspirin, acetylsalicylcic acid is mixed with sodium hydrogencarbonate and when the soluble aspirin tablet is dissolved in water the acetylsalicylcic acid and the sodium hydrogencarbonate react together.

Thanks a lot,
joe
 
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In aqueous solution the basic NaHCO3 can deprotonate the acidic acetylsalicylic acid. The resulting charged species (carboxylate anion) is very soluble in water.

Without the base then the acid would be protonated and therefore uncharged. The rest of the molecule is rather non-polar and thus not very soluble in polar solvents like water.
 
As Movies explained the issue well, I will only give the reaction scheme.

[tex]HSal + NaHCO_3 \longrightarrow Sal^- Na^+ + CO_2 + H_2O[/tex]

Normally, H2CO3 is expected to be formed, but is very unstable to yield carbon dioxide and water for lower energy and higher unregularity (entropy) needs.
 
josephcollins said:
Hi ppl,
I was wondering could someone help me with this explanation. Why does the addition of Sodium Hydrogencarbonate help an aspirin to dissolve. In tablets of aspirin, acetylsalicylcic acid is mixed with sodium hydrogencarbonate and when the soluble aspirin tablet is dissolved in water the acetylsalicylcic acid and the sodium hydrogencarbonate react together.

Thanks a lot,
joe

It's very similar to that between benzoic acid and sodium hydrogencarbonate.

C6H5COOH + NaHCO3 -----> C6H5COONa + CO2 + H2O
NaHCO3
 

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