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Sodium nitrite is an inorganic compound with the . It is a white to slightly yellowish crystalline powder that is very soluble in water and is . From an industrial perspective, it is the most important salt. It is a precursor to a variety of organic compounds, such as pharmaceuticals, dyes, and pesticides, but it is probably best known as a food additive used in and (in some countries) in fish products.

(2025). 9783527306732


Uses

Industrial chemistry
The main use of sodium nitrite is for the industrial production of organonitrogen compounds. It is a reagent for conversion of into compounds, which are key precursors to many dyes, such as . are produced from nitrites. These are used in the rubber industry.

It is used in a variety of metallurgical applications, for phosphatizing and detinning.

Sodium nitrite is an effective corrosion inhibitor and is used as an additive in industrial greases, as an aqueous solution in closed loop cooling systems, and in a molten state as a heat transfer medium.


Food additive and preservative
Sodium nitrite is used to speed up the curing of meat, inhibit the germination of Clostridium botulinum spores, and also impart an attractive pink color. Nitrite reacts with the meat to cause color changes, first converting to nitrosomyoglobin (bright red), then, on heating, to nitrosohemochrome (a pink pigment).

Historically, has been used for the preservation of meat. The salt-preserved meat product was usually brownish-gray in color. When sodium nitrite is added with the salt, the meat develops a red, then pink color, which is associated with cured meats such as ham, bacon, hot dogs, and bologna.

In the early 1900s, irregular curing was commonplace. This led to further research surrounding the use of sodium nitrite as an in food, standardizing the amount present in foods to minimize the amount needed while maximizing its food additive role. Through this research, sodium nitrite has been found to give taste and color to the meat and inhibit lipid oxidation that leads to rancidity, with varying degrees of effectiveness for controlling growth of disease-causing . The ability of sodium nitrite to address the above-mentioned issues has led to production of meat with extended storage life and has improved desirable color and taste. According to scientists working for the meat industry, nitrite has improved . This view is disputed in the light of the possible carcinogenic effects caused by adding nitrites to meat.

Nitrite has the E250. Potassium nitrite (E249) is used in the same way. It is approved for usage in the European Union, USA,US Food and Drug Administration: and Australia and New Zealand.

In meat processing, sodium nitrite is never used in a pure state but always mixed with common . This mixture is known as nitrited salt, or nitrited curing salt. In Europe, nitrited curing salt contains between 99.1% and 99.5% common salt and between 0.5% and 0.9% nitrite. In the US, nitrited curing salt is dosed at 6.25%

(2025). 9780471663744, John Wiley & Sons.
and must be remixed with salt before use.
(2021). 9781785786112, Icon Books. .


Color and taste
The appearance and taste of meat is an important component of consumer acceptance. Sodium nitrite is responsible for the desirable red color (or shaded pink) of meat. Very little nitrite is needed to induce this change. It has been reported that as little as 2 to 14 parts per million (ppm) is needed to induce this desirable color change. However, to extend the lifespan of this color change, significantly higher levels are needed. The mechanism responsible for this color change is the formation of nitrosylating agents by nitrite, which has the ability to transfer that subsequently reacts with myoglobin to produce the cured meat color. The unique taste associated with cured meat is also affected by the addition of sodium nitrite. However, the mechanism underlying this change in taste is still not fully understood.


Inhibition of microbial pathogens
In conjunction with salt and pH levels, sodium nitrite reduces the ability of Clostridium botulinum spores to grow to the point of producing toxin. Some dry-cured meat products are manufactured without nitrites. For example, , which has been produced without nitrite since 1993, was reported in 2018 to have caused no cases of botulism. This is because the interior of the muscle is sterile and the surface is exposed to oxygen. Other manufacture processes do not assure these conditions, and reduction of nitrite results in toxin production.

Sodium nitrite has shown varying degrees of effectiveness for controlling growth of other spoilage or disease causing microorganisms. Although the inhibitory mechanisms are not well known, its effectiveness depends on several factors including residual nitrite level, pH, salt concentration, reductants present and content. The type of also affects sodium nitrite's effectiveness. It is generally agreed that sodium nitrite is not effective for controlling enteric pathogens such as and .

Other food additives (such as and ) provide similar protection against bacteria, but do not provide the desired pink color.


Inhibition of lipid peroxidation
Sodium nitrite is also able to effectively delay the development of oxidative . Lipid peroxidation is considered to be a major reason for the deterioration of quality of meat products (rancidity and unappetizing flavors). Sodium nitrite acts as an in a mechanism similar to the one responsible for the coloring effect. Nitrite reacts with proteins and metal ions, neutralizing by (one of its byproducts). Neutralization of these free radicals terminates the cycle of that leads to rancidity.


Medication
Sodium nitrite is used as a medication together with sodium thiosulfate to treat cyanide poisoning. It is recommended only in severe cases of cyanide poisoning and has largely been replaced by use of , a form of vitamin B12, but given in much higher doses than needed nutritionally. In those who have both cyanide poisoning and carbon monoxide poisoning sodium thiosulfate by itself is usually recommended if the facility does not have sufficient .
(2025). 9781416000877, Elsevier Health Sciences. .
It is given by slow injection into a vein.
(2025). 9789241547659, World Health Organization.

side effects are chiefly related to creation of methemoglobinemia and vasodilation. Side effects can include low blood pressure, [[headache]], shortness of breath, loss of consciousness, and vomiting. Greater care should be taken in people with underlying heart disease. The patient's levels of [[methemoglobin]] should be regularly checked during treatment. While not well studied during pregnancy, there is some evidence of potential harm to the baby. Sodium nitrite works by creating methemoglobin, where the iron atom at the center of the heme group is in the oxidized ferric () state, which binds with cyanide with greater affinity than its binding to the cytochrome C oxidase, and thus removes it from blocking the metabolic function of [[mitochondria]].
     

Sodium nitrite came into medical use in the 1920s and 1930s.

(2025). 9780781728454, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. .
(2025). 9781607616160, Springer Science & Business Media. .
It is on the World Health Organization's List of Essential Medicines.


Suicide
Several academic publications in 2020 and 2021 have discussed the toxicity of sodium nitrite, and an apparent recent increase in suicides using sodium nitrite which had been ordered online.; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; The usage of sodium nitrite as a suicide method has been heavily discussed on suicide forums, primarily Sanctioned Suicide.

Sodium nitrite was also the focal-point of the McCarthy et al. v Amazon lawsuit alleging that Amazon knowingly assisted in the deaths of healthy children by selling them "suicide kits" as Amazon's "frequently bought together" feature recommended buying sodium nitrite, an , and a suicide instruction book together. This lawsuit was dismissed in June 2023. The online marketplace eBay has globally prohibited the sale of sodium nitrite since 2019. A distributor of sodium nitrite was prosecuted in 2023 for assisting suicide. That same year, legislation was introduced in the United States with the aim of deeming sodium nitrite products with a sodium nitrite concentration of greater than 10% by volume to be banned consumer products under the Consumer Product Safety Act.

In cases of suspected suicide involving sodium nitrite, it is critical that administer immediate intravenous . Methylene blue is the antidote to the methemoglobinemia caused by intentional ingestion of sodium nitrite as a suicide agent.


Toxicity
Sodium nitrite is toxic. The LD50 in rats is 180 mg/kg and in humans LDLo is 71 mg/kg. The mechanism by which sodium nitrite causes death is methemoglobinemia. The oftentimes severe methemoglobinemia found in sodium nitrite poisoning cases results in systemic hypoxia, metabolic acidosis, and . The reported signs of sodium nitrite poisoning are as follows:

With prompt action, sodium nitrite poisoning is reversible using an antidote, . It has been reported that sodium nitrite poisoning can also be detected post-mortem:

Death by sodium nitrite ingestion can happen at lower doses than the previously known LDLo. Sodium nitrite has been used for homicide and suicide. To prevent accidental intoxication, sodium nitrite (blended with salt) sold as a food additive in the US is dyed bright pink to avoid mistaking it for plain salt or sugar. In other countries, nitrited curing salt is not dyed but is strictly regulated.


Occurrence in vegetables
Nitrites do not occur naturally in vegetables in significant quantities,
(2025). 9780122270550
but deliberate fermentation of , for instance, with a naturally high level of nitrates, can produce nitrite levels sufficient for commercial meat curing. Boiling vegetables does not affect nitrite levels.

The presence of nitrite in animal tissue is a consequence of metabolism of , an important neurotransmitter. Nitric oxide can be created from nitric oxide synthase utilizing or from ingested nitrite.


Pigs
Due to sodium nitrite's high level of toxicity to swine ( Sus scrofa) it is now being developed in Australia to control feral pigs and . The sodium nitrite induces methemoglobinemia in swine, i.e. it reduces the amount of oxygen that is released from hemoglobin, so the animal will feel faint and pass out, and then die in a humane manner after first being rendered unconscious. The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department operates a research facility at Kerr Wildlife Management Area, where they examine feral pig feeding preferences and bait tactics to administer sodium nitrite.


Cancer
is the ability or tendency of a chemical to induce tumors, increase their incidence or malignancy, or shorten the time of tumor occurrence.

Adding nitrites to meat has been shown to generate known carcinogens such as ; the World Health Organization (WHO) advises that of "processed meats" a day would raise the risk of getting bowel cancer by 18% over a lifetime, and eating larger amounts raises the risk more. The World Health Organization's review of more than 400 studies concluded, in 2015, that there was sufficient evidence that "processed meats" caused cancer, particularly colon cancer; the WHO's International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classified "processed meats" as carcinogenic to humans (Group 1); "processed meat" meaning meat that has been transformed through salting, curing, fermentation, smoking, or other processes to enhance flavour or improve preservation.).

Nitrosamines can be formed during the curing process used to preserve meats, when sodium nitrite-treated meat is cooked, and also from the reaction of nitrite with secondary amines under acidic conditions (such as occurs in the human stomach). Dietary sources of nitrosamines include US cured meats preserved with sodium nitrite as well as the dried salted fish eaten in Japan. In the 1920s, a significant change in US meat curing practices resulted in a 69% decrease in average nitrite content. This event preceded the beginning of a dramatic decline in gastric cancer mortality. Around 1970, it was found that (vitamin C), an , inhibits nitrosamine formation. Consequently, the addition of at least 550 ppm of ascorbic acid is required in meats manufactured in the United States. Manufacturers sometimes instead use , a cheaper but equally effective of ascorbic acid. Additionally, manufacturers may include to further inhibit nitrosamine production. α-Tocopherol, ascorbic acid, and erythorbic acid all inhibit nitrosamine production by their oxidation-reduction properties. Ascorbic acid, for example, forms dehydroascorbic acid when , which when in the presence of , a potent nitrosating agent formed from sodium nitrite, reduces the nitrosonium into nitric oxide. The nitrosonium ion formed in acidic nitrite solutions is commonly

(2025). 9781482297843, CRC Press.
mislabeled nitrous anhydride, an unstable nitrogen oxide that cannot exist in vitro.
(2025). 9780444517210

Ingesting nitrite under conditions that result in endogenous has been classified as "probably carcinogenic to humans" by International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC).

(2025). 9789283212942, International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) – World Health Organization (WHO). .

Sodium nitrite consumption has also been linked to the triggering of migraines in individuals who already experience them.

One study has found a correlation between highly frequent ingestion of meats cured with and the COPD form of . The study's researchers suggest that the high amount of nitrites in the meats was responsible; however, the team did not prove the nitrite theory. Additionally, the study does not prove that nitrites or cured meat caused higher rates of COPD, merely a link. The researchers did adjust for many of COPD's risk factors, but they commented they cannot rule out all possible unmeasurable causes or risks for COPD.


Production
Industrial production of sodium nitrite follows one of two processes, the reduction of salts, or the oxidation of lower .

One method uses molten as the salt, and which is oxidized, while a more modern method uses scrap filings to reduce the nitrate.

A more commonly used method involves the general reaction of nitrogen oxides in alkaline aqueous solution, with the addition of a . The exact conditions depend on which nitrogen oxides are used, and what the oxidant is, as the conditions need to be carefully controlled to avoid over oxidation of the nitrogen atom.

Sodium nitrite has also been produced by reduction of nitrate salts by exposure to heat, light, ionizing radiation, metals, hydrogen, and electrolytic reduction.

(2025). 9780471238966


Chemical reactions
In the laboratory, sodium nitrite can be used to destroy excess .
(1995). 9780309052290, National Academy Press. .

Above 330 °C sodium nitrite decomposes (in air) to , and .

Sodium nitrite can also be used in the production of :

The nitrous acid then, under normal conditions, decomposes:

The resulting nitrogen dioxide hydrolyzes to a mixture of nitric and nitrous acids:


Isotope labelling 15N
In organic synthesis isotope enriched sodium nitrite-15N can be used instead of normal sodium nitrite as their reactivity is nearly identical in most reactions.

The obtained products carry isotope 15N and hence NMR can be efficiently carried out.


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