Quote: Originally posted by aga | This all went a bit wrong and destroyed a 100ml and a 250ml RBF on cooling, as expected.
All of the available sodium benzoate was used (~80g) resulting in about 37ml of orange liquid, still to be re-distilled to get any actual product.
The spread of heat appears to be vitally important.
In an RBF one can see the area affected by the flame becoming black and bubbling, while the rest of the white powder remains unaffected.
With a naked flame (spirit burner) this can be moved to target an unaffected area, which seemed to squeeze out a brief run of more drops of distillate
each time the flame was moved.
A steel conical flask with a huge bottom surface area might work, so that the powder remains in a very thin layer and gets heated enough for the
reaction to complete.
Maybe a steel reactor where an inert atmosphere is super-hot and the powder gets fed in somehow, while allowing the benzene gas to escape.
Edit:
The products were redistilled and a cloudy liquid came over between 71 C and 75 C, the orange stuff stayed in the boiling pot.
Yield at this point is 24.1g = 56.7%
Probably needs drying so that % will reduce
[Edited on 28-11-2016 by aga] |
I made my benzene in steel solvent cans. I punched a hole in the top and attached a brass compression fitting, which I connected to a copper tube that
ran through a thermometer adapter into a condenser. I loaded a powdered mixture of sodium hydroxide and sodium benzoate into the cans, and heated I
heated the cans over a propane stove. This resulted in an orange distillate, which was washed, dried, and fractionated. Each can is good for several
runs.
The yield was far from quantitative, but the reaction is easy to do, and the reactants are cheap and readily available. I was very careful not to
breathe any benzene; I'm not really sure how severe a carcinogen it is, but it has been proven to actually cause certain cancers.
[Edited on 27-2-2017 by JJay] |