Put it in the distillation apparatus and collect the different fractions at different temperature ranges like you did the last bottle and take it
slow and see what you get. The boiling points are as follows:
Ethyl acetate = 77.1.C
Denatured alcohol = 78.3.C
Water = 100.C
The Ethyl acetate and Ethanol are very close together again so a fraction column would be recommended but you do not have one. If you have a spare
condenser you could attach it between the boiling flask and still head and pack it with broken glass to slow the vapors.
I think the Ethyl acetate may form and azeotrope with the Ethanol because of the very close boiling points and maybe even the water so they may come
over together regardless.
If you get an azeotrope, they can be separated by extractive distillation with another solvent which doesn't look too difficult. I found this on a
patent:
"A method for recovering ethyl acetate from a mixture of ethyl acetate and ethanol which comprises distilling a mixture of ethyl acetate and ethanol
in the presence of an azeotrope forming agent, recovering the ethyl acetate and the azeotrope forming agent as overhead product and obtaining the
ethanol as bottoms product, wherein said azeotrope forming agent consists of one material selected from the group consisting of methyl formate,
2,2-dimethyl butane, hexane, cyclopentane, 2,2,4-trimethylpentane, t-butyl methyl ether, petroleum ether, dimethoxymethane and 4-methyl-2-pentanone."
And heres a link to another patent discussing the separation of Ethyl acetate and Ethanol by distillation with Methanol:
http://www.google.com/patents/US2649407 |