Packaging and storage
Preserve in tight containers.
Identification
A:
To a solution (1 in 100) add 2 N nitric acid or mercuric chloride TS: a white precipitate is formed, and it is soluble in alcohol.
B:
Dissolve about 200 mg in 1 mL of sulfuric acid, add 100 mg of sodium nitrate, and heat on a steam bath for 5 minutes. Cool, dilute with water to 10 mL, add 500 mg of zinc dust, and warm for 5 minutes on a steam bath. To 2 mL of the clear supernatant add 1 mL of sodium nitrite solution (1 in 20), cool in ice water, then add 3 mL of a solution of 500 mg of 2-naphthol in 10 mL of 6 N ammonium hydroxide: an orange-red color is produced.
C:
A solution of it in a mixture of equal volumes of water and alcohol responds to the tests for
Chloride 191.
Water-insoluble matter
A solution (1 in 10) is free from turbidity and insoluble matter.
Limit of foreign amines
To 5 mL of a solution (1 in 50) add 3 mL of 1 N sodium hydroxide: no precipitate is formed. Heat to boiling: the odor of amines is not perceptible.
Ratio of alkyl components
Mobile phase
Adjust a 0.1 M solution of sodium acetate with glacial acetic acid to a pH of 5.0. Mix 55 parts of this solution with 45 parts of acetonitrile, filter, and degas. The acetonitrile concentration may be varied from 40 parts to 60 parts to meet system suitability requirements.
Test solution
Dissolve about 1 g of Benzalkonium Chloride, accurately weighed, in water in a 50-mL volumetric flask, dilute with water to volume, and mix. Pipet 5.0 mL of this solution into a 25-mL volumetric flask, dilute with water to volume, and mix.
Chromatographic system (see Chromatography 621)
The liquid chromatograph is equipped with a 254-nm detector and a 3.9-mm × 30-cm column that contains packing L10. The flow rate is about 2 mL per minute. Chromatograph the
Standard solution, and record the peak areas as directed for
Procedure: the resolution,
R, between the C
12 and C
14 peaks is not less than 1.5; the column efficiency, determined from the C
12 peak, is not less than 1000 theoretical plates; and the relative standard deviation for replicate injections is not more than 2.0% determined from the C
12 peak.
Procedure
Inject about 20 µL of the
Test solution into the chromatograph, record the chromatogram, and measure the peak areas. Identify the homolog peaks by comparison of the retention times with those from the
Standard solution, similarly chromatographed. Calculate the percentage of each quaternary ammonium homolog taken by the formula:
100(A/B),
in which
A is the product of the area obtained from the homolog multiplied by its molecular weight; and
B is the sum of all of these products. The molecular weights of the C
10, C
12, C
14, and C
16 homologs are 312, 340, 368, and 396, respectively.
Assay for total alkylbenzyldimethylammonium chlorides
Weigh accurately a quantity of Benzalkonium Chloride equivalent to about 500 mg of anhydrous benzalkonium chloride, and transfer, with the aid of 35 mL of water, to a glass-stoppered, 250-mL conical separator containing 25 mL of chloroform. Add 10.0 mL of freshly prepared potassium iodide solution (1 in 20), insert the stopper in the separator, shake, allow the layers to separate, and discard the chloroform layer. Wash the aqueous layer with three 10-mL portions of chloroform, and discard the washings. Transfer the aqueous layer to a glass-stoppered, 250-mL conical flask, and rinse the separator with three 5-mL portions of water, adding the washings to the flask. Add 40 mL of cold hydrochloric acid to the flask, mix, and titrate with 0.05 M potassium iodate VS until the solution becomes light brown in color. Add 5 mL of chloroform, insert the stopper into the flask, and shake vigorously. Continue the titration, dropwise, with shaking after each addition, until the chloroform layer becomes colorless and the aqueous layer is clear yellow. Perform a blank determination, using 20 mL of water as the sample. The difference between the two titrations represents the amount of potassium iodate equivalent to the weight of benzalkonium chloride in the sample. Each mL of 0.05 M potassium iodate is equivalent to
x/10 mg of benzalkonium chloride, where
x represents the average molecular weight of the sample, derived by summing, for all homologs, the products
W(A/B),
where
W is the molecular weight of a given homolog,
A is the area of the peak produced by that homolog in the chromatogram from the
Ratio of alkyl components test, and
B is the total peak area for all homologs in that chromatogram.