Triflic Acid
Hazard to Others
Posts: 486
Registered: 27-9-2020
Member Is Offline
Mood: Slowly Oxidizing into Oblivion
|
|
Cyclopentadiene
I can buy ferrocene from eBay, and I think that acidifying it would give me cyclopentadiene. Distilling the acidic mixture should give me pure
cyclopentadiene. Would this work? I want cyclopentadiene to make other metallocenes by turning the cyclopentadiene into sodium cyclopentadiene-ide and
reacting that with anhydrous metal chlorides in Et2O. The anhydrous metal chlorides are made by bubbling anhydrous HCl or Cl2 gas through a metal in
MeOH.
|
|
DraconicAcid
International Hazard
Posts: 4332
Registered: 1-2-2013
Location: The tiniest college campus ever....
Member Is Offline
Mood: Semi-victorious.
|
|
I don't think ferrocene is easily decomposed with acid.
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.
|
|
BromicAcid
International Hazard
Posts: 3245
Registered: 13-7-2003
Location: Wisconsin
Member Is Offline
Mood: Rock n' Roll
|
|
Found this post at work while looking up some things on decomposing ferrocene. Strong acids can make the ferrocenium cation. Seems like it's usually
made (or at least sold/isolated) as the tetrafluoroborate salt but I did see an aqueous workup for a lab prep on ferrocene where as part of the workup
they treated the reaction mixture with hydrochloric acid and in the notes it said that the blue filtrate was from ferrocenium. When I was trying to
think of something to possibly complex with the iron strongly enough to kick off that cyclopentadiene I did wonder about oxalic acid. Interestingly
enough there are papers out there where people have gone just that route which does result in a much lower decomposition temperature vs that of neat
ferrocene but I didn't dig into what products were formed.
|
|
Triflic Acid
Hazard to Others
Posts: 486
Registered: 27-9-2020
Member Is Offline
Mood: Slowly Oxidizing into Oblivion
|
|
Interesting. Just came across this randomly. I gave up on the project and moved on, but I might just try this someday. Seems interesting enough.
There wasn't a fire, we just had an uncontrolled rapid oxidation event at the power plant.
|
|