Wolffenstein–Böters reaction
From Sciencemadness Wiki
Revision as of 18:20, 23 October 2017 by Mabus (Talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Stub}} The '''Wolffenstein–Böters''' reaction is an interesting organic reaction where benzene is converted to picric acid by using a mixture of aqueous nitric...")
This article is a stub. Please help Sciencemadness Wiki by expanding it, adding pictures, and improving existing text.
|
The Wolffenstein–Böters reaction is an interesting organic reaction where benzene is converted to picric acid by using a mixture of aqueous nitric acid and mercury(II) nitrate.
Contents
Mechanism
The reaction has not been investigated thoroughly, but research done show the following: benzene is converted to the corresponding nitroso compound by the mercury(II) nitrate and through the diazonium salt to the phenol. The presence of nitrite is essential for the reaction; picric acid formation is prevented when urea, a trap for nitrous acid, is added to the mixture. From then on the reaction proceeds as a regular aromatic nitration.[1]
Procedure
Projects
- Make picric acid
Safety
Mercury(II) nitrate is extremely toxic and proper protection must be worn when handling the compound.