I have made methyl benzoate (or was it ethyl benzoate? memory escapes me) before. I too was interested in making benzamide and then aniline. The ester
had an odd (kind of nice) characteristic odor.
I tried making benzamide by mixing the ester with 30% aqueous ammonia. It didn't react very rapidly at all. I saw no change after 12 hours. This is in
sharp contrast with (for example) methyl oxalate, which nearly immediately yields oxamide even in household-strength aqueous ammonia. I didn't have
any suitable apparatus to heat the ammonia/ester mixture in without expelling a lot of ammonia, so I just left it alone. A week or more later, I
looked again. The blob of ester that had been sitting at the bottom of the container had vanished, and in its place was a mass of fairly large,
clearish rectangular crystals.
I didn't immediately think of any way to verify the composition of this mass, so I went directly to hypochlorite oxidation. The oxidation gave me an
orange-brownish mixture with an unfamiliar and unpleasant smell. I've not experienced aniline before so I don't know if this was its smell. Obviously
pure aniline is not orange-brown, so whatever was created was not pure aniline. I tried a few variations on the hypochlorite oxidation, but all gave
essentially the same results until I'd consumed my small mass of crystals. I have not made benzoic acid esters since, mostly because I have to make
the benzoic acid myself. |