%0 Journal Article %T Frugal Utilization of Flue-Cured Virginia Nicotiana tabacum Leaf Wastes as a Vicissitudinous Substrate for Optimized Synthesis of Pyridine-3-Carboxylic Acid %J - %D 2018 %X Agrotransformation of tobacco leaves into cigarettes and cigars spawns upto 75% wastes which is an environmental and public nuisance owing to its noxious 0.6-3% (w/w) 3-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolindyl) pyridine (MPP) content. Considerately, this volumetric agrowaste is a prodigal loss during tobacco processing. Consequently, the utilization of these frugal wastes as a substrate for pyridine-3-carboxylic acid (PCA) synthesis is a green strategy to obliterate the ecological backlashes of tobacco waste. This concerted study reported the feasibility of utilizing Flue-Cured Virginia (FCV) tobacco waste as a starting substrate for synthesis of pyridine-3-carboxylic acid through MPP as a synthetic intermediate. The intermediate was extracted from powdered FCV wastes using petroleum ether and subsequently oxidized to PCA using 69% concentrated Nitric acid of volumes: 120, 115, 110,105, 100, 95, 90 and 85ml at 87¡À2¡ãC. The results of the bench scale experiments indicated that the yield of PCA increases with increase in the volume of hot nitric acid; a maximum yield of 25ml was obtained with 100ml of hot nitric acid. The lowest yield of 17ml was from 85ml of hot nitric acid. MPP had a statistical mean boiling point of 249.3¡À2.082¡ãC, mean density of 1.024¡À0.006g/cm3 whereas PCA had a mean boiling point of 262¡À3¡ãC, mean density of 1.505843¡À0.05503g/cm3, mean pH of 3.3¡À0.19 and a computed mean solubility of 1.5¡À0.017g/L. The study has shown that FCV tobacco leaf wastes is a green environmental substrate for organic synthesis of pyridine-3-carboxylic acid %K Arua %K Tobacco %K Flue-Cured Virginia %K Leaf Wastes %K Strategy %U http://www.sciencepublishinggroup.com/journal/paperinfo?journalid=341&doi=10.11648/j.ajhc.20180404.11