jeremyirons
Harmless
Posts: 10
Registered: 15-3-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
dcm-water separation
Good day!
I have got amine as a result of reductive animation, basified it until ph 12 and extracted with dcm.
Next the idea was to wash it with water since water is not miscible with dcm. So I added water, but no separation happened. I added more and more but
still nothing. Then I added some dcm thinking that it might extract amine from the mix, but it settled as a clear layer of the same volume I added.
Where am I wrong and how is it that they don't separate?
|
|
Sigmatropic
Hazard to Others
Posts: 307
Registered: 29-1-2017
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Did you take the lower layer of the initial basic biphasic mixture? It appears you have collected the upper aq. Layer instead.
Or maybe you did things so concentrated that the aq layer was more dense than the dcm layer. Anyway I would check your other layer and see whether
that is not your organic layer.
|
|
DraconicAcid
International Hazard
Posts: 4357
Registered: 1-2-2013
Location: The tiniest college campus ever....
Member Is Offline
Mood: Semi-victorious.
|
|
Mistaking the top layer for the organic layer is a very common mistake- I've had entire classes of students do that.
Please remember: "Filtrate" is not a verb.
Write up your lab reports the way your instructor wants them, not the way your ex-instructor wants them.
|
|
jeremyirons
Harmless
Posts: 10
Registered: 15-3-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
No, I took the bottom layer several times(it was same volume as dcm I poured in, so obviously correct). After a while I started noticing that the
bottom layer is less volume than I am pouring in, so I added some water and it pushed dcm out, but to the top.
|
|
jeremyirons
Harmless
Posts: 10
Registered: 15-3-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
Also I should add that I evaporated half or little more of the base solution before extracting with dcm
|
|
Sigmatropic
Hazard to Others
Posts: 307
Registered: 29-1-2017
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
Ya, your aq. solution will have been very concentrated and thus more dense than the DCM. Check miscibility of your phases before moving on to the next
step(!). Simply always taking the top layer with halogen free solvents or always the bottom layer with chlorinated solvents is bound to end in
something like this.
And it is not hard to do, just add a drop of water to your presumed organic layer, if your guess was off it will dissolve. Very much like how you
describe it.
|
|
Sigmatropic
Hazard to Others
Posts: 307
Registered: 29-1-2017
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
This gets interesting when you have an organic salt in there, I've had a three layer system with ethyl acetate organic layer on top, water in the
middle and product at the bottom as an ionic liquid. Quite a sight and surprise to behold!
|
|
jeremyirons
Harmless
Posts: 10
Registered: 15-3-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by Sigmatropic | Simply always taking the top layer with halogen free solvents or always the bottom layer with chlorinated solvents is bound to end in something like
this. |
Please elaborate on this. I'm not a chemist, but trying to understand =) I was adding the same solvent both times. There might be some IPA leftover
though.
Quote: Originally posted by Sigmatropic | And it is not hard to do, just add a drop of water to your presumed organic layer, if your guess was off it will dissolve. Very much like how you
describe it. |
So how should I proceed in case they are miscible?
And why are they miscible?
|
|
happyfooddance
National Hazard
Posts: 530
Registered: 9-11-2017
Location: Los Angeles, Ca.
Member Is Offline
Mood: No Mood
|
|
He's saying that when you mixed your base + amine and your dcm, the dcm and your product were probably the TOP LAYER. Hope you saved that top layer
|
|
fusso
International Hazard
Posts: 1922
Registered: 23-6-2017
Location: 4 ∥ universes ahead of you
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by jeremyirons | Quote: Originally posted by Sigmatropic | Simply always taking the top layer with halogen free solvents or always the bottom layer with chlorinated solvents is bound to end in something like
this. |
Please elaborate on this. I'm not a chemist, but trying to understand =) I was adding the same solvent both times. There might be some IPA leftover
though.
Quote: Originally posted by Sigmatropic | And it is not hard to do, just add a drop of water to your presumed organic layer, if your guess was off it will dissolve. Very much like how you
describe it. |
So how should I proceed in case they are miscible?
And why are they miscible? | H2O and DCM isn't miscible unless you have very huge amount of iPrOH.
DCM is almost always the bottom unless a lot of very dense material is dissolved in H2O &/or a lot of very light material is dissolved in DCM.
To separate the monophasic mixture just add DCM until 2 layers separate.
|
|
jeremyirons
Harmless
Posts: 10
Registered: 15-3-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
When DCM added it doesn't break the mixture, just sits as a separate layer. Or do you mean a lot more DCM?
|
|
fusso
International Hazard
Posts: 1922
Registered: 23-6-2017
Location: 4 ∥ universes ahead of you
Member Is Offline
|
|
Just mix the mixture until reach equilibrium, if it still remain as another layer then that's what you want.
|
|
jeremyirons
Harmless
Posts: 10
Registered: 15-3-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
I took half of the mix to boil down and see what I get.
Other half I acidified, washed with DCM, basified, extracted with toluene. Toluene looks almost translucent and the water layer left behind is yellow.
Is this ok? I'm under the impression that amine layer should be yellow-ish
|
|
jeremyirons
Harmless
Posts: 10
Registered: 15-3-2019
Member Is Offline
|
|
I realized you are right noob mistake, thanks everyone!
|
|