Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Distillation question

thelonious - 7-7-2012 at 16:36

I'm almost done piecing together my setup for distillation, and I plan to start by distilling dichloromethane out of paint stripper. Since I don't yet have any kind of pump, I'm thinking of running cold tap water through my condenser (30cm West condenser), and as a result, would be performing the distillation indoors. I don't particularly want my basement filled with dichloromethane gas, so my idea is to connect a rubber tube to the hose connector on my vacuum take-off adapter. The other end of the tube would be immersed in water. By looking at the bubbles coming out of the tube, I would be able to see how much (if any) dichloromethane is escaping my setup uncondensed.

Would this work? Is there any obvious flaw to my plan?
Thanks for helping a noob out:D


PS. I would grease the joints with vaseline to minimize any gas leakage from the ground-glass joints of my setup.

cyanureeves - 7-7-2012 at 17:08

i bet tap water is cold enough because i did it straight out of the can and it distilled at very low heat.

Sublimatus - 7-7-2012 at 18:09

If the whole setup is really air-tight, just watch out at the end of the distillation. When you shut off the heat the internal pressure will drop, and then there's the potential for the water to get sucked back up through the hose into your receiving flask.

Also, you might get vaseline leeching into the system. I recall using it for a distillation once and it got pulled out of the joints. Granted, DCM boils at a lower temperature than what I was distilling, so maybe it was just a temperature thing.

watson.fawkes - 8-7-2012 at 05:50

Quote: Originally posted by Sublimatus  
When you shut off the heat the internal pressure will drop, and then there's the potential for the water to get sucked back up through the hose into your receiving flask.
This was my concern. Suck-back could also occur if there's some kind of failure that leads to unexpected cooling. The solution is a trap, which is just an empty flask, a double-hole stopper, and a pair of hoses; insert it in the bubbler line. If water does suck back, it ends up in the flask instead of the collection flask (or worse).

kavu - 8-7-2012 at 05:55

Placing the receiving flask into an ice bath should take care of the problem. You will need a CaCl2 guard tube attached, if you want to exclude the possibility of moisture condensing into the distillate. Trapping DCM in water is a pain to dispose, you can't (or you shouldn't) pour it down the drain as it contains organic halides.

[Edited on 8-7-2012 by kavu]