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HgDinis25
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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 14:54


@ Etaoin Shrdlu
http://www.google.pt/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&am...



Ammonia is present in large excess over hydroxide ions. Acetic acid is also present in very small quantities (let's say trace amounts). The aminolysis of Ethyl Acetate should have a much lower rate than the acid/base reaction between Ammonium Hydroxide and Acetic Acid. Because the acid/base reaction is faster than the aminolysis reaction, the equilibriums I mentioned in my previous posts should shift to the right. Of course, the aminolysis would shift it to the left. However, the reaction that makes them shift to the right is faster.

At least, I would expect large contamination of Ammonium Acetate. Or is my assumption that the acid/base reaction is faster wrong?
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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 16:17


Did you read the article? There is data on the contamination. I don't know exactly where your predictions went wrong.

EDIT: Oops, I missed that bananaman had posted the same document. Still relevant, though.

[Edited on 4-12-2015 by Etaoin Shrdlu]
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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 16:23


Quote: Originally posted by HgDinis25  

Ammonia is present in large excess over hydroxide ions. Acetic acid is also present in very small quantities (let's say trace amounts). The aminolysis of Ethyl Acetate should have a much lower rate than the acid/base reaction between Ammonium Hydroxide and Acetic Acid. Because the acid/base reaction is faster than the aminolysis reaction, the equilibriums I mentioned in my previous posts should shift to the right. Of course, the aminolysis would shift it to the left. However, the reaction that makes them shift to the right is faster.

At least, I would expect large contamination of Ammonium Acetate. Or is my assumption that the acid/base reaction is faster wrong?

That's where you are getting confused. It isn't the difference in rate between the acid-base reaction, and the aminolysis of ethyl acetate. It is the difference in rate between the hydrolysis of the ethyl acetate(EXTREMELY SLOW, it doesn't matter if the equilibrium is shifted because the concentration of hydroxide ions is only 0.01M in 6M ammonia whereas the concentration of free ammonia 5.99M) and the acid-base reaction, and the aminolysis of ethyl acetate.

[Edited on 4-12-2015 by gdflp]
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HgDinis25
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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 17:32


Quote: Originally posted by gdflp  
Quote: Originally posted by HgDinis25  

Ammonia is present in large excess over hydroxide ions. Acetic acid is also present in very small quantities (let's say trace amounts). The aminolysis of Ethyl Acetate should have a much lower rate than the acid/base reaction between Ammonium Hydroxide and Acetic Acid. Because the acid/base reaction is faster than the aminolysis reaction, the equilibriums I mentioned in my previous posts should shift to the right. Of course, the aminolysis would shift it to the left. However, the reaction that makes them shift to the right is faster.

At least, I would expect large contamination of Ammonium Acetate. Or is my assumption that the acid/base reaction is faster wrong?

That's where you are getting confused. It isn't the difference in rate between the acid-base reaction, and the aminolysis of ethyl acetate. It is the difference in rate between the hydrolysis of the ethyl acetate(EXTREMELY SLOW, it doesn't matter if the equilibrium is shifted) and the acid-base reaction, and the aminolysis of ethyl acetate.


Of course it matters if the equilibrium is shifted! That's why you can easily hydrolyze Ethyl Acetate using, for instance, Sodium Hydroxide.

Now, what you could argue is that there is never enough Hydroxide ions in solution to actually accelerate the hydrolysis equilibrium enough to cause problems.

From what I can see, this is more complex than simply stating "it happens because reaction 1 is faster than 2". Kinetics of all the equilibriums should be taken into account. However, Nicodem's explanation makes sense.

I was planing a synthesis of this compound using dried Ammonia gas and dried Ethyl Acetate. I may resort to the much more simple method of adding the two reagents together, though.

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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 17:45


Quote:
Quote: Originally posted by HgDinis25  
Of course it matters if the equilibrium is shifted! That's why you can easily hydrolyze Ethyl Acetate using, for instance, Sodium Hydroxide.


No, it doesn't, because it's NOT at equilibrium!





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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 17:58


Quote: Originally posted by HgDinis25  

Of course it matters if the equilibrium is shifted! That's why you can easily hydrolyze Ethyl Acetate using, for instance, Sodium Hydroxide.

No, the shifted equilibrium ensures that the ethyl acetate will be fully hydrolyzed. The high concentration of hydroxide ions increases the rate of reaction so that it can occur at an appreciable rate in a laboratory experiment. These are two entirely different concepts!
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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 18:49


@gdflp

Quote:

No, the shifted equilibrium ensures that the ethyl acetate will be fully hydrolyzed.


At which point did I state otherwise?

Quote:

The high concentration of hydroxide ions increases the rate of reaction so that it can occur at an appreciable rate in a laboratory experiment.


Yes, that's why I stated:
Now, what you could argue is that there is never enough Hydroxide ions in solution to actually accelerate the hydrolysis equilibrium enough to cause problems.

And that quote of yours gets in contradiction with a previous one you made:
Quote:

(EXTREMELY SLOW, it doesn't matter if the equilibrium is shifted)



@DraconicAcid

I respect you and you are probably a very good chemist. But please don't do that. Don't just throw stuff into the air like you're adding fuel to the fire. Don't state things like
No, it doesn't, because it's NOT at equilibrium!
without explaining better.

What exactly isn't at equilibrium? And why doesn't it matter if the equilibrium is shifted? I can't decode your comment into useful information. Could you elaborate a little bit more, please?

What isn't at equilibrium?


[Edited on 12-4-2015 by HgDinis25]
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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 19:16


The reaction doesn't ever reach equilibrium, because it's so slow.
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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 19:23


Quote: Originally posted by HgDinis25  
@gdflp

Quote:

No, the shifted equilibrium ensures that the ethyl acetate will be fully hydrolyzed.


At which point did I state otherwise?

Quote:

The high concentration of hydroxide ions increases the rate of reaction so that it can occur at an appreciable rate in a laboratory experiment.


Yes, that's why I stated:
Now, what you could argue is that there is never enough Hydroxide ions in solution to actually accelerate the hydrolysis equilibrium enough to cause problems.

And that quote of yours gets in contradiction with a previous one you made:
Quote:

(EXTREMELY SLOW, it doesn't matter if the equilibrium is shifted)


No, you're talking about accelerating the equilibrium and such, that's not what happens. And I am not contradicting myself, as those two quotes are saying entirely different things. The equilibrium of a reaction and the rate of a reaction are two entirely different concepts. A hydrolysis reaction could have an extraordinarily high equilibrium constant which favors entirely products, but that irrelevant if the kinetics of the reaction show that it would take a century to reach equilibrium(extreme case obviously). An equilibrium determines what the concentration of the reactants will be after a mixture has had ample time to react, but most equilibrium's don't occur instantly. Thus, the time it takes for a reaction to reach equilibrium is determined by the kinetics of the reaction which are separate from the equilibrium of the reaction. There may be a change in the rate of the reaction due to the kinetics being based off of the concentration of some reactants, but it is quite possible for the reaction rate to be unaffected regardless of the concentration of any of the reactants and thus be a slow reaction even if there is a high or low equilibrium constant. This is why a reaction can be extremely slow(unfavorable kinetics), but have a favorable equilibrium and will eventually reach equilibrium if no other faster reactions are competing. This is the case here, the hydrolysis of ethyl acetate will eventually occur, but since the concentration of free ammonia is so much higher than hydroxide in the reaction mixture, the aminolysis has much more favorable kinetics and will thus be the predominant reaction.

The equation for the equilibrium of A + B <--> C + D is k = ([C]*[D])/([A]*[B]) whereas the equation for the kinetics of that reaction is Rate = k[A]^n*[B]^m*[C]^p*[D]^q, but n m p and q could all be 0 and thus the concentration of any of them would not affect the rate of reaction.(Note that the two k's are different)
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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 19:52


@gdflp

The presence of Hydroxide ions increases the hydrolysis rate. It also shifts the equilibrium to the right (product gets consumed). I don't understand your persistence in trying to textbook me with kinetics.

This all comes down to:
Reaction A - Hydrolysis of Ethyl Acetate
Reaction B - Ionization of Ammonia
Reaction C - Aminolysis of Ethyl Acetate
Reaction D - NH4OH and Acetic Acid to form Ammonium Acetate

If Reaction C is faster than reaction A then Acetamide will be the major product. If reaction A is faster than reaction C then reaction D prevails and Ammonium Acetate will be the major product.

Now, in the absence of Hydroxide ions, reaction A is very slow. However, in the presence of said ions, the rate of reaction A increases. Thus, if OH ions are being consumed (reaction D), reaction B will ionize more ammonia. What you're all trying to sell is that reaction C still prevails. Some actual data could help, though.

About your contradiction:
The high concentration of hydroxide ions increases the rate of reaction so that it can occur at an appreciable rate in a laboratory experiment.

and

(EXTREMELY SLOW, it doesn't matter if the equilibrium is shifted)

Hydroxide ions increase the rate of reaction and shift the equilibrium to the right (by consuming one of the products).

In these conditions, if the rate is increased it is because of the Hydroxide ions. So, we can conclude that there must be hydroxide ions to increase reaction rate. Then you said that reaction is extremely slow, not mattering if the equilibrium is shifted. For the equilibrium to be shifted there must be hydroxide ions. And therefore, if there are hydroxide ions reaction rate increases. Now, what you might be saying is that the increase in rate, with such small amount of hydroxide is negligible. I stated that a few posts ago:
Now, what you could argue is that there is never enough Hydroxide ions in solution to actually accelerate the hydrolysis equilibrium enough to cause problems.



@Etaoin Shrdlu
Is reaction A that slow even in the presence of the Hydroxide ions? If so it must have a very low rate to allow acetamide formation free from Ammonium Acetate.


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[*] posted on 11-4-2015 at 20:13


Yes, that is true. The reason that I didn't contradict myself is that in the two statements of mine, I was talking about a different equilibrium. It was a poor choice of words, but my point was that it doesn't matter if the equilibrium concerning the ionization of ammonia is shifted, the concentration of hydroxide ions will be miniscule and thus the reaction will be extremely slow. What it boils down to is that the aminolysis and hydrolysis(in basic conditions) of ethyl acetate have similar reaction rates if the concentration of the nucleophile(NH3 and OH- respectively) is the same. Even though the hydroxide is being constantly regenerated by the ionization of more ammonia molecules, it's concentration at any one point is never very high, as I stated a few posts back the concentration in 6M ammonia is 0.01M OH-, whereas the concentration of the other nucleophile, NH3 is very high throughout the entire reaction, thus it is the faster reaction. Some ammonium acetate will be formed, but as I stated previously, this isn't much of an issue anyway since most of it should decompose to acetamide during the workup. In addition, in basic conditions, reactions A and D occur simultaneously as different parts of the same mechanism.

[Edited on 4-12-2015 by gdflp]
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[*] posted on 12-4-2015 at 07:04


Quote:
@gdflp
The presence of Hydroxide ions increases the hydrolysis rate. It also shifts the equilibrium to the right (product gets consumed). I don't understand your persistence in trying to textbook me with kinetics.


Because kinetics are what's important in this particular case. You can't shift the equilibrium to the right or the the left unless the system has reached equilibrium, and because the hydrolysis reaction with water is so slow, it doesn't get there over any reasonable time span.

Look- a wise man once said that there is no need to argue if an experiment can be done. Do you have any ethyl acetate? Take a mL of that, and a mL of water, put them in a test tube, shake it up. Once equilibrium is reached for the hydrolysis reaction, there should be enough ethanol and acetic acid present to give you a homogeneous mixture instead of a two-phase one. Shake it twice a day, and let us know when it stops separating. Do the same thing with ethyl acetate and aqueous sodium carbonate solution (carbonate isn't very nucleophilic, unlike ammonia). See if the hydrolysis reaches equilibrium any faster.

Quote:

This all comes down to:
Reaction A - Hydrolysis of Ethyl Acetate
Reaction B - Ionization of Ammonia
Reaction C - Aminolysis of Ethyl Acetate
Reaction D - NH4OH and Acetic Acid to form Ammonium Acetate

If Reaction C is faster than reaction A then Acetamide will be the major product. If reaction A is faster than reaction C then reaction D prevails and Ammonium Acetate will be the major product.

Now, in the absence of Hydroxide ions, reaction A is very slow. However, in the presence of said ions, the rate of reaction A increases. Thus, if OH ions are being consumed (reaction D), reaction B will ionize more ammonia. What you're all trying to sell is that reaction C still prevails.


This is correct. Even in the presence of a low concentration of hydroxide ions, reaction A is extremely slow, so we basically don't have to worry about it. If you were to use 1 M sodium hydroxide, you'd probably have appreciable hydrolysis quite quickly, but not in aqueous ammonia.

ETA: It seems that even a lower concentration of sodium hydroxide will hydrolyze ethyl acetate, at least according to several undergraduate experiments that measure the rate, such as http://www.uni-ulm.de/physchem-praktikum/media/literatur/Kin...


[Edited on 12-4-2015 by DraconicAcid]




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HgDinis25
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[*] posted on 13-4-2015 at 11:51


Well, this has been an interesting discussion so far. I'll make sure to attempt a synthesis on Acetamide from Ammonia and Ethyl Acetate

@gdflp
Again, this all comes down to both reaction rates. Some actual values would be good, though. Anyway, your arguments make sense. If we consider the hydrolysis of Ethyl Acetate too slow in the presence of minimum amounts of Hydroxide ions then the most logical outcome would be the aminolysis of Ethyl Acetate.

@DraconicAcid

Quote:

Because kinetics are what's important in this particular case. You can't shift the equilibrium to the right or the the left unless the system has reached equilibrium, and because the hydrolysis reaction with water is so slow, it doesn't get there over any reasonable time span.


You can't shift the equilibrium, that's correct. But you can dramatically increase the reaction rate by adding small amounts of hydroxide ions. That would allow the system to reach equilibrium and then would allow it to be shifted.


Quote:

Look- a wise man once said that there is no need to argue if an experiment can be done. Do you have any ethyl acetate? Take a mL of that, and a mL of water, put them in a test tube, shake it up. Once equilibrium is reached for the hydrolysis reaction, there should be enough ethanol and acetic acid present to give you a homogeneous mixture instead of a two-phase one. Shake it twice a day, and let us know when it stops separating. Do the same thing with ethyl acetate and aqueous sodium carbonate solution (carbonate isn't very nucleophilic, unlike ammonia). See if the hydrolysis reaches equilibrium any faster.


I couldn't disagree more. Of course there is a need to argue! The reaction you just mentioned can occur exactly like you said. However, it can be for completely different reasons than the ones you stated. That's just like saying you can evaporate gold at ordinary temperatures. Just add it to mercury and it will disappear! It evaporated! This is ridiculous. I can also think of he good old story about the earlier tests for benzene. The substance wasn't actually testing for benzene.

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[*] posted on 24-11-2015 at 02:23


Hi!

I've tried the Polesch's method of acetamide synthesis, but after 24h of stirring, when I turned off stirrer, there were still two separate layers. Currently I'm waiting if some crystals will appear after some days. I used 25% NH4OH and probably pure enough EtOAc. Does someone know why this doesn't work for me?

Thanks!




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[*] posted on 1-12-2015 at 00:15


I'm back again, to tell you that the polesch's method worked! After a few days I did get some crystals (as on his pictures), even though solutions still separated after 24h of mixing :D

Best regards, xfusion44




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[*] posted on 25-4-2016 at 10:46


After 48 hours of stirring there were no more separate layers. BUT there was a small amount of white solid! After filtrating and reducing the volume nothing came out. I will let the solution to evaporate freely and I´ll see. 7 mL of 27% ammonium solution was used.



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[*] posted on 25-4-2016 at 17:52


Quote: Originally posted by Hegi  
... After filtrating and reducing the volume nothing came out.


I hope that DraconicAcid does not see this. :o

[Edited on 26-4-2016 by Magpie]




The single most important condition for a successful synthesis is good mixing - Nicodem
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[*] posted on 26-4-2016 at 11:12


Quote: Originally posted by Hegi  
After 48 hours of stirring there were no more separate layers. BUT there was a small amount of white solid! After filtrating and reducing the volume nothing came out. I will let the solution to evaporate freely and I´ll see. 7 mL of 27% ammonium solution was used.


It looks like it takes a few days for crystals to start forming, just leave it to sit a few more days and I'm sure you'll see crystals soon ;)



IMG_20151203_225949.jpg - 1.4MB IMG_20151203_225847.jpg - 1.6MB IMG_20160426_205915.jpg - 1.3MB

[Edited on 26-4-2016 by xfusion44]




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[*] posted on 27-4-2016 at 10:22


Quote: Originally posted by xfusion44  
Quote: Originally posted by Hegi  
After 48 hours of stirring there were no more separate layers. BUT there was a small amount of white solid! After filtrating and reducing the volume nothing came out. I will let the solution to evaporate freely and I´ll see. 7 mL of 27% ammonium solution was used.


It looks like it takes a few days for crystals to start forming, just leave it to sit a few more days and I'm sure you'll see crystals soon ;)





[Edited on 26-4-2016 by xfusion44]



I´m not so sure. There is absolutely minimum amount of the solution. I would say max 2-3 mL.


[Edited on 27-4-2016 by Hegi]




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[*] posted on 27-4-2016 at 17:30


Quote: Originally posted by Hegi  
Quote: Originally posted by xfusion44  
Quote: Originally posted by Hegi  
After 48 hours of stirring there were no more separate layers. BUT there was a small amount of white solid! After filtrating and reducing the volume nothing came out. I will let the solution to evaporate freely and I´ll see. 7 mL of 27% ammonium solution was used.


It looks like it takes a few days for crystals to start forming, just leave it to sit a few more days and I'm sure you'll see crystals soon ;)





[Edited on 26-4-2016 by xfusion44]



I´m not so sure. There is absolutely minimum amount of the solution. I would say max 2-3 mL.


[Edited on 27-4-2016 by Hegi]


How much of ethyl acetate did you use? 2-3ml doesn't make sense to me, if you started with total of about 20ml (EtOAc + NH4OH) What about filtered part of solution? You said that volume of solution was reduced significantly after filtering - maybe you filtered off your acetamide, since you also mentioned that you could see some white stuff forming in solution (perhaps that was it). Although it's theoretically impossible to filter acetamide, due to its very high solubility in water, you probably succeded with that, since crystals already started to form and if you didn't mix the solution before filtering it, the crystals had no time to dissolve so they were probably stopped by the filter. Although, I could be wrong... How about the purity of EtOAc? And are you sure your ammonia solution is 27%? If its old or if it was stored in warm place, it could be much less concentrated.

I'd suggest you to try again, but this time don't filter the solution, just leave it in wide container, at room temperature for 3-4 days and you should see the crystals.




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[*] posted on 13-4-2018 at 01:08


I got back to the synthesis. I mixed 10 ml of p.a. ethyl acetate in a baker with 7 ml of 25-26% ammonia solution and stirred at 1000 rpms the mixture for over 24 hours. The layers are still present. Can somebody explain this? Should I use excess of ammonia solution?

Thanks in advance.




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[*] posted on 17-4-2018 at 04:25


Quote: Originally posted by Hegi  
I got back to the synthesis. I mixed 10 ml of p.a. ethyl acetate in a baker with 7 ml of 25-26% ammonia solution and stirred at 1000 rpms the mixture for over 24 hours. The layers are still present. Can somebody explain this? Should I use excess of ammonia solution?

Thanks in advance.


I used more ammonia and layers separated. Then I got wrong by heating the solution and hydrolyzed my product... now I have acetic acid... I should have left the solution freely to crystalize...




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[*] posted on 20-4-2018 at 00:51


Quote: Originally posted by Hegi  
Quote: Originally posted by Hegi  
I got back to the synthesis. I mixed 10 ml of p.a. ethyl acetate in a baker with 7 ml of 25-26% ammonia solution and stirred at 1000 rpms the mixture for over 24 hours. The layers are still present. Can somebody explain this? Should I use excess of ammonia solution?

Thanks in advance.


I used more ammonia and layers separated. Then I got wrong by heating the solution and hydrolyzed my product... now I have acetic acid... I should have left the solution freely to crystalize...


I repeated the procedure... After homogenization of solution I got final solution that was pretty basic (pH over 12). I poured this into Petri´s dish and left freely to crystalllize. Next day I came to the lab the smell of ammonia was gone and replaced by the smell of acetic acid. However, small crystals are on the surface of the liquid. I will wait till monday what is going to happen.




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