How does temperature and pH affect the solubility of p-nitrophenol?

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Temperature and pH significantly affect the solubility of p-nitrophenol, with higher temperatures and increased pH generally enhancing solubility. The solubility of p-nitrophenol is reported to be 11.6 g/L at 20°C, which is insufficient for preparing a 1M solution. Attempts to dissolve p-nitrophenol at 1M resulted in visible undissolved particles, leading to a dilution to a 10mM solution instead. Heating the solution to 80°C and stirring may help, but some solid particles may still remain, indicating incomplete solubility. Using an alkaline solution could potentially improve solubility further, especially if the solution is intended for dilution in a buffer.
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Hi!

Can anyone inform me on the solubility of p-nitrophenol? I want to make 1 molar solution of the substance, which is 0.0139g/100 ul (MW is 139). Unfortunately, my solution seems to be supersaturated as the solute is still visible.

Do I need to do anything to my solution to make it soluble?

At Wikipedia, the pKa of p-nitrophenol is 7.08 at 20∘C.
 
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Wikipedia lists solubility as 11.6 g/L (20 °C), almost 10 times lower than you need. Heating up and increasing pH should increase the solubility, whether it will get high enough - hard to say. Question is - does hot alkaline solution fit your needs?
 
Thanks for your reply.

I diluted it instead to 100ml to make 10mM solution as it was impossible to dilute at 1M.
 
I'm studying adsorption kinetics of PNP, need to prepare complete soluble of PNP solution, I do add the solid of PNP into deionized distilled water then heating up to 80deg C and stirring at 1000rpm for few hours, but still exists very tiny solid/particle. Is it considered completely soluble?
 
I think you'll be able to dissolve it if you add excess base.
 
Borek said:
Question is - does hot alkaline solution fit your needs?
I'm guessing this is s stock solution that will be diluted for final use. (I can't imagine why anyone would directly use a 1M solution.) If so, and as long as it will be diluted into buffer, some excess base shouldn't be a big problem.
 
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