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Author: Subject: Storing Diethylamine?
Picric-A
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[*] posted on 16-9-2009 at 02:09


quantities used, reaction time, problems encountered, colour changes ect!
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panziandi
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[*] posted on 16-9-2009 at 02:18


I agree, molar quantities used, method chosen, yield obtained ought to be enough, just to provide some experimental clarity to the extensively waffley and hard to follow crap thats come out of the DEA thread to date.



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entropy51
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[*] posted on 16-9-2009 at 05:11


Quote: Originally posted by sonogashira  
Quote: Originally posted by kclo4  
Be interesting to see at least a write up, etc.

What is to write up?! It is a hydrolysis! :D:D


Please check out the thread on hydrolysis of DEET and you will see that the devil is in the details.

That's the reason that papers in chemical journals normally include a section entitled "experimental" in which the details are explicitly described.

"It is a hydrolysis!" is analagous to "He was a man!" in reply to the policeman who asked you who shot you in the arm. Such a reply doesn't convey much information that is helpful.
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[*] posted on 16-9-2009 at 06:35


Thank you for you nice analogy and (ironic?) response - you begin to remind me of someone who left not so long ago (perhaps before your time?)

Please tell me what the devil in the details is. Heating for extended periods with excess 20% NaOH/ethylene glycol - as described in nearly every organic chemistry book - does not work? I would be surprised.

I can see no devil in the details - just poor experiments and impatient experimenters.
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[*] posted on 16-9-2009 at 07:21


Well, exactly. Now someone hints at having done a GOOD experiment so some of us would like to know how it was done. That's sort of why we're here on the forum.

It would just be nice to have a happy ending to a long and confused thread.

You say NaOH/ethylene glycol and that sounds reasonable. But AgentMadHatter may have found a better way. Perhaps a better solvent? Sometimes KOH is better than NaOH. How long is "extended periods"? How did he purify the product? What was the yield? Who can say?
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[*] posted on 16-9-2009 at 15:06


Ok. After thinking the thread was done by confirming all I needed was an amber bottle with a proper seal...I didn't look back until today. If you guys honestly don't believe this was my procedure.

I got a lot of bottles of 30ml of 98% DEET and 2% other (Suspected Alcohol since it allowed water and the DEET to mix)

I threw in 500mls of the DEET with Dilute Sulfuric acid at a 28% concentration. Once the PH was at 3, I refluxed for 8 hours at 70C, using water to prevent any evaporation.

After adding distilled water and seeing that it did not form two layers, I knew the hydrolysis was complete. At which Point I added KOH until the mixture was at 7 pH.

Distilled off the DEA through my condenser into a cooled container of HXl in EtOH. Forming DEA.HCl.

I have the liquid sitting in an amber glass. Trying to figure out if letting it evaporate under a vacuum will cause any DEA vapors or anything.

That was my procedure.

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[*] posted on 16-9-2009 at 16:02


Fantastic! So it was an acid hydrolysis rather than base. Good to know. So by distilling into HCl/EtOH you didn't get any crystals of the HCl salt?

I'm still not sure what you meant by this:
Quote: Originally posted by Agent MadHatter  
I'm positive I have it, because I took off the acid and made it freebase and watched my product disappear into the air.
Because the BP of Et2NH is 55.5 C, I don't know what you mean by "disappear into the air".

Did you recover the m-toluic acid product? Did you calculate a percent yield? BP during distillation?

Good job.



[Edited on 17-9-2009 by entropy51]
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[*] posted on 17-9-2009 at 12:51


Like I said...I'm not chemistry major. If I get product, thats good enough for me. I don't know how to calculate percent yield compared to theoretical yield, I do know the BP was around 60 C but not over it. 55-60C.

But whats the best way to get the DEA HCl crystals out of the ethanol now? Just evaporation? Or will the DEA evaporate?
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[*] posted on 17-9-2009 at 12:54


Quote: Originally posted by Agent MadHatter  


But whats the best way to get the DEA HCl crystals out of the ethanol now? Just evaporation? Or will the DEA evaporate?


Is it DEA or DEA.HCl????
If it is the latter then no it will not evaporate, you can gently remove the ethanol by heating on a steam bath.
If it is the former i would convert it to its HCl salt then do as above.
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[*] posted on 17-9-2009 at 15:17


Quote: Originally posted by Agent MadHatter  
Like I said...I'm not chemistry major. If I get product, thats good enough for me. I don't know how to calculate percent yield compared to theoretical yield, I do know the BP was around 60 C but not over it. 55-60C.

But whats the best way to get the DEA HCl crystals out of the ethanol now? Just evaporation? Or will the DEA evaporate?


Chem major or not you should keep a notebook recording what you did and what you observed. Then when you need to ask a question you could give us some background information.

Do you have crystals? The amine HCl is soluble in both EtOH and H2O.

But the amine HCl is not volatile, so you may be able to evaporate off the solvents and get crystals. The way this is usually done is to add the amine to Et2O saturated with HCl gas, forming nice crystals that can be filtered off.

And you still haven't clarified your statement that you watched the product evaporate into the air when you "removed the acid". I'm starting to wonder if you have any product at all.
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[*] posted on 20-9-2009 at 17:18


Personally, Agent MadHatter, I would have made the reaction mixture far more basic than pH7! I would have added KOH until I got pH10 or something, using saturated aqueous KOH. Then Distilled the liquid collecting anything coming over below 60, collected using ice-cold water in the condenser and submerging the flask in salt/ice bath. then I would have dried the liquid of solid KOH (atleast a few hours! Perferably a day) and then redistilled it. I wouldn't bother with the HCl salt as it is too hygroscopic! If you REALLY want the salt, I would distill the dried amine into ether saturated with HCl (or ether solution of amine treate dwith HCl). Alcohol contains too much water to get nice crystals.



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[*] posted on 20-9-2009 at 20:18


Quote: Originally posted by Agent MadHatter  
Ok. After thinking the thread was done by confirming all I needed was an amber bottle with a proper seal...I didn't look back until today. If you guys honestly don't believe this was my procedure.

I got a lot of bottles of 30ml of 98% DEET and 2% other (Suspected Alcohol since it allowed water and the DEET to mix)

I threw in 500mls of the DEET with Dilute Sulfuric acid at a 28% concentration. Once the PH was at 3, I refluxed for 8 hours at 70C, using water to prevent any evaporation.

After adding distilled water and seeing that it did not form two layers, I knew the hydrolysis was complete. At which Point I added KOH until the mixture was at 7 pH.

Distilled off the DEA through my condenser into a cooled container of HXl in EtOH. Forming DEA.HCl.

I have the liquid sitting in an amber glass. Trying to figure out if letting it evaporate under a vacuum will cause any DEA vapors or anything.

That was my procedure.



The 2% are other isomers of DEET (Probably with ortho and para methyl groups instead, or with only one ethyl group present)

The reason for this is simply that it's not worth industry's time or money to refine their starting materials to ultra-high purity unless the contamination is a hazard instead of just being inert. If N,N-diethyl-o-methylbenzamide is harmless, boils within a half degree of the desired DEET, and the average consumer won't know or care if the product is 98% or "100%"(nothing is ever 100%) DEET, then why throw away 2% of profit, plus spend money fractionating the two compounds better? Perhaps people would care if it was around 95% but I tend to think that the average shopper rounds 98% up to 100% in their head.

It's simple economics.

[Edited on 9-21-09 by UnintentionalChaos]




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[*] posted on 22-9-2009 at 01:28


who cares how he made it or even if he did. it was a simple question how too store it.

simple amines dont react with them selves and dont oxidise over time. they do absorbe water though. dark bottle simple

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