Glad we got that cleared up. Wait--it get's worse. Not only do you have no understanding of the concepts needed to successfully complete such
a synthesis, you seem to have no understanding of what your target is. The PEA in perfume is phenylethylalcohol, not the amine, found
in chocolate, among other things.
oh...I see...
Very briefly, inert solvents are those that won't react with anything that you're using in the reaction, under the
conditions you use. Water, for example, has many excellent properties as a solvent, but it is also somewhat reactive, i. e. not inert in many
reactions. Purification is needed because the thing you have when you're done your reaction contains not only the product, but the solvent,
unreacted starting materials, and products from side reactions. It can be done in many ways. Some of the basic techniques are recrystalization,
distillation, and chromatography.
oh, I got it. Well....I just learn the purifying method last week..
I have my doubts about the current proposed strategy. Using excess benzene would prevent polyalkylation, but that would open up the possibility
of polyarylation of the ethane.
One possible alternative is to start from styrene, react with aqueous peracid (you could try cold permanganate), dehydrate the diol with
H<sub>2</sub>SO<sub>4</sub>, and do a reductive amination. All these reactions should be found in standard organic texts.
can I use the method given by Nick F? I don't have any organic texts..
Rhodium's drug chemisty site gives plenty of procedures for compounds of this type. Decarboxylation of phenylalanine is attractive. can I know the address of the site? |