You seem to be pulling the solvent vapors straight into your vacuum pump. This will contaminate the oil and quickly destroy the pump. Immediately
disassemble the pump completely, clean it and fill it with fresh oil.
DCM and triethylamine are best removed by distillation at atmospheric pressure. If you insist on using vacuum, you will either have to put a cold trap
cooled with dry ice or liquid nitrogen between your distillation setup and the pump and have the solvent condense there, or buy a chemically resistant
diaphragm vacuum pump that lets you condense the solvent vapors at the pump outlet at atmospheric pressure and with a water-cooled condenser.
I have such a chemically resistant pump, the MZ2C from Vacuubrand, and I can only recommend that you don't use your rotary vacuum pump in the chemical
laboratory.
[Edited on 15-3-2012 by garage chemist] |