Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Garage Experiments With Trichloromethane.

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Zinc - 27-1-2007 at 05:28

Today I made a few mililiters of CHCl3. It smells very good.

GhostofUnintentionalChaos - 7-3-2007 at 18:44

Has anyone done a "one-pot" oxidation and haloform reaction straight from isopropanol? I realize that yields would go down a bit since the alcohol:hypochlorite molar ratio would have to be 1:4 instead of 1:3 when acetone is used in place of the alcohol and you end up with more water for the chloroform to dissolve in.

Any idea what kind of "home-made" stopper I can use for this stuff? I have brown glass, but only some rubber stoppers for them. Someone said earlier that it will attack cork, and I imagine it can dissolve most plastics, not to mention reacting with metals. I don't have any teflon other than the white tape, which I know is probably too porous, no?

[Edited on 8-3-2007 by GhostofUnintentionalChaos]

garage chemist - 8-3-2007 at 00:20

I don't think chloroform attacks cork. If corks get attacked, then only from the bleach and not from the chloroform.

It should work with isopropanol and adjusted ratios.
And you should of course always distill the chloroform out of the mix to get good yields, no matter which process you use.

Veruth - 13-4-2007 at 08:14

Hm, I just noticed that the wikipedia article for chloroform claims that it can be produced with bleach and MEK. Is this even possible, or just wrong?
"Sodium hypochlorite solution (bleach) and methyl ethyl ketone (nail-varnish remover) produces chloroform."

UnintentionalChaos - 13-4-2007 at 08:59

That should work just fine. The resulting reaction products should be sodium propionate, sodium hydroxide, and chloroform. Look up "haloform reaction" which gives you the criteria for the reaction to occur.

Sauron - 13-4-2007 at 11:11

The haloform reaction is a general one for any compound having a methyl group alpha to a carbonyl.

Acetaldehyde, acetone, MEK, MIBK. And so on.

UnintentionalChaos - 17-4-2007 at 23:34

Just how well does PTFE stand up to chloroform? I have recently acquired some heavy duty gas line PTFE tape (can handle Natural Gas under 100PSIG, propane, butane, naptha, benzene, kerosene, gasoline, and petroleum oils) and have a glass bottle to hold @250ml of CHCl3. It looks just like a miniature wine bottle (green glass) and has a standard soda bottle screwtop. I took out the little insert in the cap, gave it a triple layer of the tape, crushed the insert in a vice between wood blocks to bond the tape to itself, and jammed it back into the plastic screwtop. There is a very obvious dark yellow line where the glass rim compresses the light yellow PTFE tap after being screwed onto the bottle firmly. What kind of shelf life can I expect before I have to make a new insert, or is PTFE relatively immune to corossion by CHCl3? I have brown screwtop glass bottles as well, but without PTFE sheeting, I can't make a cap insert.

not_important - 18-4-2007 at 00:58

So long as there isn't a hairline leak it should keep well. Even most halogenated hydrocarbons have little to no effect on PTFE


http://www.kimble-kontes.com/pdfs/solvent_compatibility_2.pd...

bob000555 - 18-4-2007 at 12:50

Try mixing your trichloromethane with silver nitrate and see if you get an ungodly explosive. CHCl3 + 3 AgNO3 -> CH(NO3)3 + 3AgCl The silver chloride is insoluble and will sink to the bottom.

einstein(not) - 18-4-2007 at 13:30

The chlorinated brake cleaner we have locally contains tetrachloroethane. Can this be used in the same way as trichloroethane or does the extra chlorine render it useless.

Perk -> CHCl3

smuv - 2-5-2007 at 21:20

I have never seen that mentioned. But it may be possible as C2Cl4 + 2 Cl2 <--> 2 CCl4 (this reaction is reversible). Therefore, maybe hydrochlorination of tetrachloroethylene under the right conditions may yeild a 1:1 mix of carbon tet and chloroform. Although this would be a vapor phase reaction and probably a tricky one to control at that as industrially neither carbon tet or chloroform are made from ethylene. Although CCl4 is a byproduct from the manufacture of tetrachloroethylene from 1,2 Dichloroethane.


However from trichloroethylene (electronics cleaner and some degreasers, although it is being phased out) one can make chloroform in 2 steps:

First trichloroethylene is oxidized and rearranged by HClO forming chloral. Chloral can then enter the haloform reaction in the presence of NaOH yielding chloroform. It is possible that bleach and trichloroethylene will yeild chloroform and sodium formate, although I have never seen both of these reactions run together.

C6H6 - 28-8-2007 at 15:59

Tetrachloroethane is a halogenated solvent, same as chloroform, trichloroethane, etc. However, if I remember correctly it is much more hazardous to your health. It's classified as very toxic.

Slimz - 24-9-2007 at 12:20

[Edited on 24-9-2007 by Slimz]

Cloroform

Slimz - 27-9-2007 at 14:50

Ok so following a procedure ifound here, i tried to make this.

I used the same 6% bleach and 100% acetone (denatured)

500ml 6% bleach in a beaker
added 20ml of acetone over about 5 minutes time
stirred for about 10 min
cooled during process in a cool water bath (kept cool with pieces of ice periodicaly)

let stand for about 10-15 min (sorry for the approx times)

when it was all over i had a milky wight to and about 7ml of something on the bottom

i sucked it out with an eyedropper after removing much of the top liquid

the smell of this substance is similar to acetone but sweeter and warmer... was i successful??

[Edited on 27-9-2007 by Slimz]

chloric1 - 27-9-2007 at 14:53

OK slimz don't sniff it because it obviously killed the brain cells that you use to spell words correctly.:P

ssdd - 27-9-2007 at 14:56

Yes odds are you were successful.

This should have been a clear oil on the bottom.

This process I have done several times successfully, you can probably get away with this in a simpler manner by adding the acetone all at once and not worrying too much about cooling the reaction.

-ssdd

The_Davster - 27-9-2007 at 15:03

You knew there was a thread on this already, and posted a new thread on the same topic? The other one is perfectly fine, and this is being merged with it.

Slimz - 27-9-2007 at 15:25

sorry about the thread.. different forums have different expectations... ill know better next time\



i just did it again with 1000ml bleach and about 40ml acetone (added all at once) it bubbled like crazy .. i added a little more acetone after a while (just to see if i could continue the reaction) about 20ml .. its sitting outside now, but i have not seen separation yet...

No problem. Unlike some forums, we don't mind old threads being resurected, it helps keep valuable information all in one spot -Davster




[Edited on 27-9-2007 by The_Davster]

feacetech - 27-9-2007 at 15:39

Quote:
Originally posted by bob000555
Try mixing your trichloromethane with silver nitrate and see if you get an ungodly explosive. CHCl3 + 3 AgNO3 -> CH(NO3)3 + 3AgCl The silver chloride is insoluble and will sink to the bottom.


Ungodly tell me more?

How safe is this what sort of reaction conditons are needed, time, temp, mixing, chloroform in excess, gravity feed filtration of AgCl, washing of product?

The product CH(NO3)3, what are the propities of this, shock sensitve, cap sensitive etc. Storage criteria; dissolved in solvent, safe handling advice, safe amouunts for first time reaction?

Uses?

stygian - 27-9-2007 at 15:53

Do a search for trinitromethane (also called nitroform). And you should get plenty of information.

Slimz - 27-9-2007 at 15:54

ok this stuff is still not separating... but its still warm.. the last reaction was smaller, do you think this one could just be taking a long time, or do you think its botched??

ssdd - 27-9-2007 at 16:01

You may have added too much acetone, usually 20-30 ml is enough for 900ml to react to near completion. I am not sure if this would have any effect.

** Found it chloroform is soluble in acetone so adding too much acetone would cause the small amount of product to dissolve.

Try tipping the reaction vessel to the side a bit to see if the oil sloshes over to the corner, sometimes in large quantities this is needed.

-ssdd

Slimz - 27-9-2007 at 16:48

no i botched it... too much acetone... i winder if i could add mure bleach to react out the rest of the acetone... ???

Slimz - 27-9-2007 at 17:14

well added bleach and im getting product now... that was definitely an interesting experiment...

feacetech - 27-9-2007 at 18:04

Quote:
Originally posted by stygian
Do a search for trinitromethane (also called nitroform). And you should get plenty of information.


Chloroform and silver nitrate dosent look like it will make nitroform

Was that fact or guess work

stygian - 27-9-2007 at 18:20

oh silver nitrATE.. I see now.

Regardless, at a quick glance the formula that somebody else posted looked like trinitromethane, which I was merely commenting upon. Not even my idea in the first place thank you.

woelen - 27-9-2007 at 22:57

Silver nitrITE (not nitrATE) can be used to make nitroform. I'm not sure whether this can be done from chloroform. The description I have seen starts from iodoform, making AgI and CH(NO2)3.

Slimz - 28-9-2007 at 07:39

would pool shock wich is not Sodium Hypochlorite react with acetone?

edit i think its
dichloroisocyanurates wich is a clorine donor.

[Edited on 28-9-2007 by Slimz]

guy - 28-9-2007 at 09:55

Yes it would but you need to add enough sodium hydroxide to generate hypochlorite and to deprotonate the acetone

Slimz - 28-9-2007 at 10:02

anyone have any suggestions as to ammounts. the dichloroisocyanurates is powdered (99%-100%)
the lye will also be powdered (red devil brand or something similar)

And would this method have a higher yield?


[Edited on 28-9-2007 by Slimz]

woelen - 28-9-2007 at 11:20

Don't mix the pure dichloroisocyanurate powder with pure acetone. That almost certainly will result in a very violent reaction, possibly with fire.

There is a thread on this subject already, Garage chemist has done a lof of interesting experiments with making chloroform from TCCA & Co.

http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=5686&a...

Slimz - 28-9-2007 at 11:38

thnx.. ill read it...

Phosphor-ing - 28-9-2007 at 12:14

Wasn't this thread a sticky a few days ago?

Slimz - 28-9-2007 at 13:12

no i think it was just very active..

Aqua_Fortis_100% - 23-2-2010 at 15:23

Thats my last week of holidays, so I did some shots for this old project. I would want DCM because is less toxic than chloroform and usually have same dissolving properties. But because not only chloroform but also methylene chloride are watched here (hence I dont know any OTC product here for both susbstances), I think chloroform synthesis would be easier performed on homelab than DCM.


In the backyard some ~120g of (old) poolshock 65% calcium hypochlorite was measured out and added to a large glass container (about 3 L) then 900mL of water (+ 5g NaOH) added to it.

(I was fearing chloroacetone formation, so I added NaOH, but only after experiment and more careful reading I payed attention to the fact that NaOH isnt really necessary since the reaction produces its own base. )

12 ice pieces (each made with about 50mL of water) were then added.
~45mL of acetone ( distilled from a nail polish remover) were mixed with ~150mL of water and this solution was then slowly added to hypo/ice suspension with stirring.

After some minutes from the last addition the smell its totally different. Quite a 'sweet' smell, like all people says.

This mix was left overnight in hope to give better yield.

In the next day the mix was heated in a homemade distiller. In the receiving flask was put some ~30mL water to avoid evaporation of colected chloroform and the flask was put on a ice/water bath for same purpose.

In the start of the step, the tube of distiller started to bubble a unknow gas through the water of the receiving flask. And this gas bubbled through all the distillation. Dont think that would be any chloroacetone though. The white suspension on distilling flask formed a froth and in the end nothing was collected. :(



I repeated the experiment today, but using less water and also did the modification proposed by polverone: using a greater excess of acetone (all hypo consumed) and neutralizing the calcium hydroxides in the end with HCl.

~120g of hypo was added in a water/ice mix (~300mL water + ~650g ice(13 pieces)) and stirred. Slowly and with vigorous stirring, ~60mL of acetone was added (addition finished in about 5 minutes, without the mix getting warm to touch and ice already floating on it).

This mix was agitated more time and left to stand about 4 hours.
Then, with stirring, it was slowly neutralized by concentrated HCl. Some bubbles were visible and then I put my face backwards and continues mixing. After all was dissolved I could see a large blob of chloroform (~5mL) on the bottom. I extracted the raw chloroform with a dropper and measured: ~6,5mL in a small graduated cilinder.

The solution containg chloroform was then distilled in the backyard with the same setup used before. A slight chocking gas started to evolve but drops of a liquid started to distill and in the end I collected about 8mL of a yellow/green imiscible liquid a the bottom, maybe contaminated chloroform.

I extracted it and breathed (not deep though). In the start it smells like chloroform but after it burns a lot! My eyes started to tear somewhat... argh.... If this is chloroform contaminated with chloroacetone (but probably could be) or other substances I dont know, but I think it wont be easily purified by further distillation, so I added it to the solution from which comes and I soon will destroy all with feonton's reagent before throw all of it away.


The only word I can use here (but thinking in worse words) for that wasted time is PITA!!!! :mad::mad::mad:


Now, the natural question would be: how could I get higher yields of calcium hypochlorite method without distilling the calcium suspension?

I was thinking in make conc. bleach from Na2CO3 and Ca(OCl)2, filtering, reacting with acetone, extracting and distilling.. But seems more work..

BTW, was BromicAcid the only person here that tried the electrochemical method?






[Edited on 23-2-2010 by Aqua_Fortis_100%]

bbartlog - 25-2-2010 at 08:16

I've only done this with 6% NaOCl solution, not calcium hypochlorite. The reaction seems to proceed fairly easily with NaOCl, so my first thought is that the Ca(OCl)2 just doesn't work as well for some reason (maybe the limited solubility of Ca(OH)2 as opposed to NaOH).
Like you I've also found that trying to distill dissolved chloroform from the aqueous phase in an attempt to increase yield is just not worth it. You won't get much more than you already have in the dense phase at the bottom, and there will be contaminants to deal with.

Couple of other comments on your second attempt, based on my own experience:
The liquid volume is still kind of large IMO given that you are using ice. You would want this much if you were just using RT water, but with the ice you should be able to cut the liquid volume further. Just using straight room temperature bleach I end up with 830mmol per liter, and either use no cooling (if I'm not mixing) or just dip the flask into cold water if I am mixing to speed the reaction. The temperature doesn't get above 70C which suggests that we're only looking at about 60Kcal per mole (of bleach) of heat. With the Ca(OCl)2 we would assume twice that per mole. In your case you have about 550mmol of bleach which should net no more than 60-70Kcal of heat(*). If you start with 660g of water with 2/3 of it frozen and the rest at 0C (similar to your ratio, but with 1/3 less) then the temperature should not go above 50C. Further, it seems to me that if you set yourself up to distill directly from your reaction vessel, the heat (up to a point) will work in your favor by driving the chloroform out of solution and into the vapor phase, before any possible reaction with base could take place.
You could probably look up the actual heats of reaction if you wanted something better than my back-of-the-envelope figures.
I also don't think neutralizing with HCl is useful unless you can distill the aqueous phase successfully (and that doesn't seem worth it). In the case you describe, there's already been four hours of mixing for possible degradation of your product to take place, so you clearly aren't saving the blob of CCl3 by neutralizing at this point.
I have used an excess of acetone (and also an excess of bleach) and not seen any noticeable improvement in yield over using exact stoichiometric ratios. Using excess acetone tends to result in the formation of base-catalyzed condensation of the acetone, though this does take longer than the haloform reaction we want. In your case, I'd wonder about the rate at which different chlorination reactions take place. If the first chlorination (to chloroacetone) and the second (to dichloroacetone) proceed at speeds close to the third (from dichloroacetone to trichloroacetone), then an excess of acetone means you'll produce appreciable amounts of mono- and di- chloroacetone that don't get fully chlorinated before the hypochlorite is exhausted. Though I don't know anything about the reaction kinetics it wouldn't surprise me if this partly explains your low yield.
Finally, when starting at room temperature (and then rapidly rising to 60C+) this reaction takes only a few minutes to complete. Maybe with everything kept around 0C it takes four hours or more but absent some nice improvement in yield I don't see much reason in keeping it cold.

My suggestion would be to try the reaction using 12g of your hypochlorite and 100ml of cold water (but no ice), with a stoichiometric amount of acetone (if your hypochlorite is 65% Ca(OCl)2 then this would be 2.1g). If the heat seems manageable (or not) you can then adjust the amount water and scale up.

Aqua_Fortis_100% - 25-2-2010 at 13:55

Thank you very much by comment bbartlog. I will keep this info on mind if trying it again..

Im inclined to use Ca(OCl)2 method since household bleach here sucks (the concentration in "active chlorine" is only about 2-2,5% and if I did right math, this means a almost similar hypochlorite concentration, that is much lower than yours 5-6% NaOCl) and 12% variety is very hard to come (and also is quite expensive).

Using 500mL of this crappy bleach I obtained in the bottom only a small blob (0,5mL, at best).

Yesterday I did a second experiment, making a somewhat more concentrated bleach from Ca(OCl)2, based on a experiment from garage chemist according to this thread: http://www.sciencemadness.org/talk/viewthread.php?tid=8504#p...

(Ive did this before, but at much lower amounts, for hydrazine sulfate and semicarbazide chloride synthesis)

I did a slurry of ~250g of Ca(OCl)2 65% + 750mL water + 150g ice then a cooled Na2CO3 solution (made by boiling ~500mL water and mixing with ~190g of dehydrated Na2CO3) was added to it. The CaCO3 precipitation was immediate and quite a while after adding all of the solution, the suspension turned very viscous and very hard to stirr.. I stirred for 5 mins with a big plastic spoon and the suspension turned again liquid.. I left it for about 30 mins and then filtered using first a piece of cloth then filtering again through filter paper (2 or 3, because if using one at time the strong alcaline bleach is likely to perfure it). This is the messy and very boring step as filtration is very slow.

In the end I obtained ~1100mL of a pale green liquid that I chilled in the freezer (and also added some ice to speed up.. about 300g) and then added slowly and with stirring 70mL of non-distilled nail polish remover. After some minutes along with good smell, appeared also some white, flocculating precipitate that quickly settled. I left it overnight and then today I see a large blob of chloroform on the bottom, carrying some of the precipitate with it..

I will try to distill all of it tomorrow (Unfortunatelly I cant do this today.. I hope that I dont lost much chloroform).

Quote:
Further, it seems to me that if you set yourself up to distill directly from your reaction vessel, the heat (up to a point) will work in your favor by driving the chloroform out of solution and into the vapor phase, before any possible reaction with base could take place.


After my crude experiments and more detailed experiments from other people, that seems to most promising when working with hypochlorite, although there will be some problems (froth, foaming, some chloroform reacting, etc..)...
The guy from the videos below obtained some very large amounts of chloroform using calcium hypochlorite... I wish to have similair professional distilling setup one day, at least on my dreams :P

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IdfHMz7WeXI&NR=1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wh_7fjHV_BY

So, by above videos and from reports from other people in this thread, calcium hypochlorite is much more interesting as OCl- source than dilute sodium hypochlorite, but in real life it seems that when not controlling parameters such as water content, temperature, etc and even more when using improvised equipment (like I) will NOT be too easy to reach any good yields.

Arghhh
Water, a necessary evil... :mad:

entropy51 - 26-2-2010 at 12:12

Chloroform

50 gm Ca(OCl)2 and 150 mL H2O was placed in a 1 Liter RBF equipped with magnetic stirring and a reflux condenser and surrounded by a cold (not ice) water bath. 19 mL of acetone was added cautiously, first in 1 mL portions through the condenser until the mixture thickened and foamed. Add remainer of acetone in small portions to maintain a gentle reflux without heating. Finally stir for one hour and arrange condenser for downward distillation. Distill off the CHCl3 using a hot water bath. BP = 60 - 63 C. Yield was about 15 mL.

It is important to use an oversize flask as the reaction foams vigorously.

Rich_Insane - 14-3-2010 at 13:18

Hey everyone, I did an experiment. So here's what I did. I calculated that for 10 ml of Acetone, I would have 0.135 mol of it.

Now the reaction is Acetone + 3NaOCl --> CHCl3 + 3H2O, so I needed three times as much NaOCl. That's 0.409 mol, which is 30.44 g. The bleach I have is 6%, so i figured that I needed 507 ml of that bleach with 10 ml Acetone to yield 10.94 ml of CHCl3 (theoretical yield).

So I measured out 250 ml of bleach and put it into a 400 ml beaker. The reason I didn't add all of it was because the beaker was only 400 ml capacity, so I would have to get rid of some of the aqueous layer first. Then, in a cooking pot, I added a lot of ice and water and stuck the beaker in with a thermometer. I then added a very small amount of acetone and watched the bleach go from yellow, to cloudy. I stirred gently with the thermometer.

http://img379.imageshack.us/img379/6924/1002256.jpg

After that, I slowly added 100 more ml and a tad more acetone. I stirred and watched the temperature, not letting it go a degree above 30 Celsius.

I measured out the rest of the bleach and added the rest of the acetone, slowly pouring out excess aqueous junk. Then, after about 10 minutes, I took the beaker out, and using a disposable pipette, sucked out all the chloroform I could get. I put this chloroform into a small beaker, and for purposes of showing to all of you, put it in a test tube.

http://img638.imageshack.us/img638/7507/1002271.jpg

I took this and washed the impurities out by adding tap water, then pipetting as much water as possible out. In the process I lost probably 0.1 ml of CHCl3. The final product was measured in a 10 ml graduated cylinder shown below.

http://img62.imageshack.us/img62/4595/1002276u.jpg

My yield was around 5 ml, which is 45.67% of the theoretical yield. I dropped 1 ml on the ground and watched it evaporate quickly like chloroform. Then I transferred to a vial.

http://img709.imageshack.us/img709/5945/1002278a.jpg

I decided to keep this CHCl3, so I added some diluted acetone onto the layer, sealed in a plastic bag and put it in the freezer.

http://img641.imageshack.us/img641/3605/1002285.jpg

The two reagents I used were:

http://img714.imageshack.us/img714/1047/1002259.jpg

and

http://img175.imageshack.us/img175/339/1002257.jpg

:o Pictures are way too big. Could someone tell me how I can resize them on Imageshack?

[Edited on 14-3-2010 by Rich_Insane]

[Edited on 17-1-2011 by madscientist]

Formatik - 27-3-2010 at 19:48

Quote: Originally posted by entropy51  
Chloroform

50 gm Ca(OCl)2 and 150 mL H2O was placed in a 1 Liter RBF equipped with magnetic stirring and a reflux condenser and surrounded by a cold (not ice) water bath. 19 mL of acetone was added cautiously, first in 1 mL portions through the condenser until the mixture thickened and foamed. Add remainer of acetone in small portions to maintain a gentle reflux without heating. Finally stir for one hour and arrange condenser for downward distillation. Distill off the CHCl3 using a hot water bath. BP = 60 - 63 C. Yield was about 15 mL.

It is important to use an oversize flask as the reaction foams vigorously.


Higher yield was described by Orndorff and Jessel in the American Chemical Journal, using a synthesis employing 275g Ca(OCl)2 with 33.3% active Cl in 800ccm water and 22g acetone in 70ccm water, yielding 36-38g CHCl3.


Attachment: Orndorff, Jessel, Am. 10, 365.pdf (337kB)
This file has been downloaded 746 times


Eclectic - 15-1-2011 at 19:18

(BUMP)

Did anyone ever figure out what the White precipitate is? I tried this with 3 gallons Clorox Outdoors in a 5 gallon plastic bucket,
assuming it was 10% sodium hypochlorite, with 350 ml acetone. Clorox was set in chest freezer @ 0.0 F for a week and was found
to be same consistancy after stirring with paint stirrer on drill as a "Slushy" frozen beverage. Acetone poured in over 30-60 seconds
with vigorous drill stirring. No problems. Ice took about 20 minutes to thaw, And temp never got above room temp (outside, 45 F).


[Edited on 1-16-2011 by Eclectic]

bbartlog - 16-1-2011 at 05:57

Which white precipitate where? I skimmed a couple pages of the thread but am not inclined to reread the entire thing to figure out what you're talking about.

Quote:
I tried this with 3 gallons Clorox Outdoors in a 5 gallon plastic bucket,
assuming it was 10% sodium hypochlorite, with 350 ml acetone.


Doesn't the bottle tell you what the percentage is? In my neck of the woods my default assumption would be 6%, but on the plus side I don't need to assume because all of the OTC bleach actually tells you what % strength it is. Don't know why the ammonia isn't labeled the same way.
Also beware of some of the outdoor bleach-type cleaners, they have other stuff in them besides hypochlorite and hydroxide.

So how was your yield after the above? How did you get the chloroform out? Also I'm surprised that your temperature didn't rise a little more; with 10% bleach I would expect a rise of maybe 60-70C, but I guess that if there was a lot of frozen slush in your mix then much of the energy went to melt the ice.

In a related vein, I recently performed the haloform reaction using methyl ethyl ketone (2-butanone) rather than acetone. I mixed 3630g of 6.15% sodium hypochlorite solution with 72g of MEK in a one gallon pickle jar, with both reagents starting at -5C temperature due to the frosty conditions out in my barn. Stirred intermittently. Reaction took a while to proceed, but after about 40 minutes the temperature had risen to 45C (which was where it topped out). Unfortunately I then had to let this stand for a couple of days before getting back to it, which may have resulted in some hydrolysis of the chloroform at the bottom. After decanting most of the top aqueous phase I separated the remainder in a separatory funnel, with a net of 45g of chloroform. Only 38% yield and that's for crude product, I imagine it will drop more once I've redistilled it.
Anyway, besides comparing yields on this (MEK versus acetone) I wanted to see whether this was at all viable as an OTC route to propionic acid; I will see if I can work up the aqueous phase and get any propionic acid from it.


Eclectic - 16-1-2011 at 06:38

Freezing the bleach to a slush to avoid needing ice was the main point of
the experiment. It seems to work, and allows rapid addition of the
entire amount of acetone with vigorous stirring. I'll do some workup
today. I could not find a hypochlorite % on the label, but MSDS for both
"Outdoors" and "Deck Cleaner" say 6-10%.

I got about 1/2 gallon heavy emulsion and floculant white precipitate.
Distillation would be only practical way to do workup. There does seem
to be some kinda detergent in the "Clorox Outdoor". Lots of soapy bubbles cleaning up bucket.


[Edited on 1-16-2011 by Eclectic]

The WiZard is In - 16-1-2011 at 08:34

Quote: Originally posted by chemoleo  
shadeT - trichloroethylene - sniff it a bit and u know what u *could* use it for :)


TCE was used at one time as an anesthetic in child birth! And
widely in industry to clean electronic components.

Not that many years ago you could but it OTC, then it was
banned as a carcinogen. It had replaced OTC carbon tetrachloride
when that was determined to be carcinogenic. It was replace
by 1,1,1 trichloroethane. Which was ..... you got it!

At not extra charge ... for a short period acetylene was used
in Europe as an anesthetic.

The WiZard is In - 16-1-2011 at 09:05

Quote: Originally posted by Haggis  
Hello forumites, I bring you some info on my cheap and easy synthesis of trichloromethane.



Sorry I gave up reading this thread, I have never seen so much
chemical silliness and speculation.

Chloroform is easily made (worked for me many-many moons
ago) by reacting calcium hypochlorite and acetone. If you are
planning on living forever just mix them, or to speed things up
boil them together, actually it take some time — reflux.

2CH3COCH + 6CaOCl2-H2O = 2CHCl3 + 2(CH3COO)2Ca + 2Ca(OH2) + 3CaCl + 6H2O

Don't worry 'bout stocio. just be sure to use enough hypochlorite
to react all the acetone. You can distill the chloroform off if you want.

Noted in passing —

Linda Stratmann
Chloroform : The Quest for Oblivion
Sutton Publishing 2003

Byda it was originally made by it discoverer by distilling ethyl
alcohol with chloride of lime.

bbartlog - 16-1-2011 at 12:59

Mixing solid CaOCl2 and acetone is not such a good idea; the reaction is fairly exothermic. Not sure it would actually catch fire but it would sure boil off the chloroform in a hurry, as well as unreacted acetone and other intermediate products.

bbartlog - 16-1-2011 at 19:04

Quote:
I got about 1/2 gallon heavy emulsion and floculant white precipitate.


Weird result. But I think I see the problem: Chlorox says (on their site, see: http://www.thecloroxcompany.com/cgi-bin/form_ingredients.cgi... ) that the outdoor cleaner is not just hypochlorite. It has a bunch of crap in it (the MSDS says: Water, Sodium hypochlorite, Sodium chloride, Cetyl betaine, Sodium carbonate, Sodium hydroxide, Sodium silicate, Sodium xylene sulfonate).
Couldn't guess what your emulsion and precipitate are but I think you should do this reaction with plain bleach.

Eclectic - 16-1-2011 at 19:34

Yes, pure sodium hypochlorite solution is better. The emulsion is
chloroform and water, but it's never gonna break and separate because
of the detergents. But I did verify that freezing ice out of 10% sodium
hypochlorite at 0F will make additional ice unnecessary.



[Edited on 1-17-2011 by Eclectic]

Eclectic - 21-1-2011 at 08:43

Experiment was retried with 2X184oz bottles 6.15% Sodium Hypochlorite.
Poured in 5 gallon plastic bucket and frozen overnight in chest freezer.
Slush was stirred with drill operated paint stirrer and 1 cup acetone was poured in with vigorous stirring. A plastic lid was snapped on, and mixture was left overnight, yielding 200ml crude water white CHCl3
after decanting top aqueous layer.
Both phases were transparent with no sign of precipitate or emulsion.

trezza - 4-3-2011 at 01:23

Hello all, Tonight I attempted a chloroform synthesis following this web page: http://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/chloroform.h...

I scaled it down to 2/5ths because I don't have large glassware to use.

About half way through adding the acetone with a pipette the flask quickly filled up with a white frothy stiff mass and became fairly hot, it appears to be calcium hydroxide as it is just barely soluble in water.

I used a granular pool salt claiming to have 700g/kg chlorine as calcium hypochlorite, nothing else is listed.

What has gone wrong here and why?

[Edited on 4-3-2011 by trezza]

entropy51 - 4-3-2011 at 06:46

Quote: Originally posted by trezza  
What has gone wrong here and why?
Nothing, really. This reaction always tends to misbehave. You may have added too much acetone before the reaction started. From my post above, this method works for me (most of the time). Use a large flask with good stirring.
Quote: Originally posted by entropy51  
Chloroform

50 gm Ca(OCl)2 and 150 mL H2O was placed in a 1 Liter RBF equipped with magnetic stirring and a reflux condenser and surrounded by a cold (not ice) water bath. 19 mL of acetone was added cautiously, first in 1 mL portions through the condenser until the mixture thickened and foamed. Add remainer of acetone in small portions to maintain a gentle reflux without heating. Finally stir for one hour and arrange condenser for downward distillation. Distill off the CHCl3 using a hot water bath. BP = 60 - 63 C. Yield was about 15 mL.

It is important to use an oversize flask as the reaction foams vigorously.

trezza - 4-3-2011 at 07:23

Once all of the acetone is added and it has been stirred can I expect it to return to a liquid? The large flask I'm using to carry it out in doesn't have a ground head so I can't use a condenser, I need to transfer the liquid over to a smaller flask for distilling when the reaction completes.

Arthur Dent - 4-3-2011 at 14:33

Well, you guys seem to have a lot of fun with this, so I decided to try this interesting experiment, and I devised an apparatus for my synthesis using some of my newly-acquired glassware. I started with 500 ml of 6% Sodium Hypochlorite, and 10 ml of acetone, as suggested in previous posts.

Being weary of this first synthesis of a toxic compound, and knowing that it's exothermic, I took extreme precaution in setting-up my apparatus, even putting a gas scubber on top of the setup to see if the reaction generates any gas. I decided to use a separatory funnel for two distinct uses: 1 To slowly drip the acetone in the bleach, and 2 To separate the final solutions from each other.


This is the synthesis apparatus, I used a round bottom flask set in an ice water bath, and put the separatory funnel on top in order to drip very slowly the acetone in the bleach solution. I dropped a small stubby stir bar in the round bottom flask and set the stirplate to medium. The thermometer was set just to satisfy my curiosity, and see if the ice bath warms up much. The reaction started with both liquids at about 3 deg. celcius.


carefully measured 10 ml of acetone


Pouring the acetone in the separatory funnel, and then I opened the stopcock just barely so that it was dripping about one drop per second.


In this picture, you can see the really cool swirl that started forming as each drop of acetone entered the solution.

With the bath, the slow addition of acetone and the constant swirling action of the stir bar, the reaction was quite rapid, and only slightly exothermic, the flask was barely lukewarm even at its peak.


An then, I saw a very cool reaction... 2 minutes into the acetone addition, (1/3 of the acetone in) WOOSH! the solution turned from transparent to cloudy almost instantly, in less than half a second! I would have missed it if it wasn't the fact that I was staring intensely at the flask!


Another change in the solution, about 6 minutes into the reaction, the solution turned from yellowish beige to a lovely opal color, and you could notice droplets of CHCl<sub>3</sub> forming and swirling around at the bottom. Final temperature of the bath (with all the ice melted) was about 10 deg. celcius. And as for the generated gas? Ziltch! Nada! Nutthin'! There was not even one bubble released in the gas scrubber, and my apparatus was tightly sealed!

The reaction took barely 20 minutes total from the first drop to the coalescing of chloroform at the bottom of the flask. I disassembled the entire apparatus and set-up the separatory funnel with a small 10 ml volumetric flask below.


I pipetted most of the solution on top with... a turkey baster! Hell of a lot faster than a 10 ml pipette! The remaining solution was poured in the separatory funnel to separate the CHCl<sub>3</sub>


You can clearly see the clean separation between the chloroform and the remaining solution of sodium acetate, acetone and gunk.


Final yield: about 6 ml of impure chloroform. Yay! You can see the disassembled gear at the back, already cleaned and ready to be put back.

So my first synthesis of that magical product was a success. Just wanted to check if I could do it. As I was looking at the small volumetric flask, I said to myself "Now what?" What do I do with this small amount of chloroform? Since I have no use for it for the moment and it doesn't keep very well, I promply disposed of it. :(

What helped was that I used the right gear and took my time to set-up everything. Goes to show that there's a tool for every task and when you use the proper tools and good methodology, you get good results. And I want to thank Peach for inspiring me to post this detailed photo-description of my experiment!

Robert



[Edited on 4-3-2011 by Arthur Dent]

Paddywhacker - 5-3-2011 at 19:52

> Now what?

Look at the chlorobutanol thread. You can condense your chloroform with more acetone to make a tertiary alcohol, chlorobutanol. Lovely transparent crystals easily purified by sublimation, I hear.

Then you can esterify it with acetic acid to make an exotic ester, and tell us what it smells like.

Chemistry is fun.

Arthur Dent - 6-3-2011 at 04:50

Mhh, I have no use for chlorobutanol either, but as for your second suggestion, would a mixture of the two produce methyl chloroacetate? CH<sub>3</sub>COOH + CHCl<sub>3</sub> --> C<sub>3</sub>H<sub>5</sub>ClO<sub>2</sub> ?Sorry, I'm not very well versed in the magic of Ethanoic Acid and acetates... ;)

Robert

Paddywhacker - 6-3-2011 at 11:26

No.

My suggestion was that you esterify the chlorobutanol to make the acetate ester. The acetate esters around the molecular weight of butyl acetate and amyl acetate are very fruity, so the chlorobutanol acetate may be similar.

If yoy have access to other ketones than acetone, such as methyl ethyl ketone, or MIBK, these might undergo an analogous reaction to that of actone to provide you with higher molecular weight analogues of chlorobutanol, which you could also esterify. But that is speculation on my part.


DougTheMapper - 7-3-2011 at 22:05

Well, since it seems that everybody is performing this reaction, I decided to give it a go.

Here's the setup with the 5.3L jug of 6.15% NaClO in a bucket with snow and water. Chloroform does not attack HDPE.



Acetone was added over the course of an hour in 10mL increments. The temp never exceeded 26C. Total added amount was 125mL.



The vessel was allowed to settle for 30 minutes before the majority of the effluent was decanted from the trichloromethane.



The remainder separated beautifully and was introduced to the bottle using a separatory funnel.



The final raw product is now stored in an amber bottle for further processing. I may end up using it as-is for caffeine extraction or I might distill and dry it to get into chlorobutanol. Final yield was 110mL (±5)



Pretty routine synth. I find myself strangely attracted to the smell of the chloroform. It has a very unique sweet odor which becomes hot at higher concentrations.

[Edited on 8-3-2011 by DougTheMapper]

Aqua_Fortis_100% - 30-9-2011 at 18:12

Nice prep. and yields, Arthur Dent and DougTheMapper.

Im building an electrochemical chlorine generator (based on this: http://quimicanova.sbq.org.br/qn/qnol/1993/vol16n2/v16_n2_%2... (portuguese) ) in order to make some nice experiments in next hollidays..

I was wondering if direct chlorination of acetone in aqueous NaOH would produce chloroform. I know that reacting chlorine with acetone/H2O/CaCO3 one will make treacherous chloroacetone(s), but Im not sure if high pH of NaOH is sufficient to prevent chloroacetone formation and thus making chloroform..

If this is not possible, then would chlorinating EtOH in aqueous NaOH be an alternative?..

Thanks.


simba - 30-9-2011 at 19:12

Quote: Originally posted by Aqua_Fortis_100%  
Nice prep. and yields, Arthur Dent and DougTheMapper.

Im building an electrochemical chlorine generator (based on this: http://quimicanova.sbq.org.br/qn/qnol/1993/vol16n2/v16_n2_%2... (portuguese) ) in order to make some nice experiments in next hollidays..

I was wondering if direct chlorination of acetone in aqueous NaOH would produce chloroform. I know that reacting chlorine with acetone/H2O/CaCO3 one will make treacherous chloroacetone(s), but Im not sure if high pH of NaOH is sufficient to prevent chloroacetone formation and thus making chloroform..

If this is not possible, then would chlorinating EtOH in aqueous NaOH be an alternative?..

Thanks.



EtOH should work. Today I made iodoform accidentally this way, I was gonna make sodium iodide from iodine tincture + NaOH. But since the tincture used EtOH as solvent, I got iodoform instead of iodide.

MeSynth - 3-10-2011 at 21:27

If you guys are trying to get chlorform I recommend the bleach and acetone method. You get a bucket of ice and pour in a gallon of bleach that you can buy from home depot and then add in acetone. I forget the ratio of bleach to acetone. The ice is needed for the right reaction to take place. I think I found that method in the rhodium archive. all you do is stir it like soup until its done and the separate the chloroform layer and distil. I used my chloroform to weld styrofoam. :D

Low yeilding though.

[Edited on 4-10-2011 by MeSynth]

Steve_hi - 4-10-2011 at 04:09

I was reading this thread from the begining and someone posted that chloroform doesnt keep that well now i'm wondering about mine which I bought last january I have a litre can of reagent grade is there anything I can do to keep it longer? how long does it take to degrade? it is in a metal can and I have opened it.

mr.crow - 4-10-2011 at 10:52

Your chloroform will be fine. It decomposes with light and oxygen to make phosgene. Stabilizers like methanol react with this to get rid of it. Metal can = no light

ScienceHideout - 14-10-2011 at 18:43

I have mine in a clear- amber glass bottle (I bought it). I keep it in the darkness of my chemical cabinet... so I would think that I shouldn't worry about phosgene.

Been There; Done That

Foss_Jeane - 1-11-2011 at 20:04

This isn't all that difficult to do. The key to success is to use good hypochlorite. Clorox doesn't work, though a more concentrated form ("Liquid Plumr" -- when it was still basically hypochlorite before they started putting other gunk in it) worked just fine. Keeping the reaction cool, and stirring helps greatly. Add the acetone or MEK (used both) portionwise until the color is discharged. The chloroform drops to the bottom, and is drawn off with a sep funnel. More can be distilled out of the remaining water.

The chloroform can then be distilled, dried over MgSO4, and stored with a little dry ethanol or methanol to clean up whatever phosgene forms (reacts quickly to form ethyl or methyl carbonate). You can boil off the water to recover the sodium acetate or propionate. No sense wasting it (especially the latter) waste not; want not.

Bad Idea #1)

"A bit soaked in paper towel and held to a flame will sizzle slightly and occasionally give off a darker smoke/vapor. I do not know if this is the papertowel burning, or otherwise, but at one point, I sniffed lightly the fumes rising above it and was hit with an odd sensation of burning, pain, shock, suffocation, and general"

Never do that. Burning chloroform (and other methane chlorides) makes phosgene. Not good.

Bad Idea #2)

"As far as the applications of chloroform, how much is needed to "knock out" an hypothetical human subject weighing approximately 120 pounds? How long does it take to "kick in"? And how long until they naturally revive (assuming that they are not in the 1 of 1000 that die from it)?"

Chloroform was once used for anesthesia until it was discovered that 1 out of 4000 people would not survive. Those might seem to be pretty long odds, but if you're wrong, you die. It's a good solvent, but breathing it isn't such a swell idea.

Bad Idea #3)

"He passed out for a few minutes, but came out alive. The good thing about HCN is that it doesn't cause long-term injury- if you recover, it's as if nothing happened :D. Just make sure to get fresh air".

Actually, HCN does have long term consequences, as it turns into formic acid. It can have the same effect as drinking methanol: ruins your eyesight, and could cause blindness. If working with HCN, a good fume hood is mandatory. If using HCN, it is also inflammable to the N-th degree, and makes explosive mixtures with air. It's also been known to self-detonate as well.

woelen - 1-11-2011 at 23:41

Quote: Originally posted by Steve_hi  
I was reading this thread from the begining and someone posted that chloroform doesnt keep that well now i'm wondering about mine which I bought last january I have a litre can of reagent grade is there anything I can do to keep it longer? how long does it take to degrade? it is in a metal can and I have opened it.
Chloroform keeps indefinately in a perfectly closed container. It indeed reacts with oxygen from air, making phosgene, but once that oxygen is used up no further reactions occur. So, if your bottle of chloroform is well sealed and no air can get in, then your chloroform will keep for a very long time. Only when the bottle is opened and closed frequently it will deteriorate. For this reason, I have put 100 ml of my chloroform in a small bottle and I use that for experiments and the remaining 400 ml I keep in the original bottle, well sealed and this bottle is not opened, until the small 100 ml is empty.

497 - 2-11-2011 at 01:01

Quote:
Actually, HCN does have long term consequences, as it turns into formic acid. It can have the same effect as drinking methanol: ruins your eyesight, and could cause blindness. If working with HCN, a good fume hood is mandatory.


I don't buy it. Is there any reference that this is a serious danger from cyanide? Workers have inhaled up to 10 ppm levels of HCN every day for many years and suffered relatively minor health effects. Levels over about 20 ppm cause noticeable physical effects such as headache immediately. Levels of 30 ppm or below are not lethal after 8 hours. 100 ppm may be lethal after 1 hour of exposure. The amount of formic acid formed from this sort of one time exposure will never be near that of a sublethal one time methanol exposure. By the way HCN is lighter than air.

Realistically, you are either going to expose yourself levels of 100 ppm or above and risk rapid death or you will be exposed to lower levels, feel physical symptoms, leave the area and ultimately survive. Formic acid will be the least of your worries. Nobody here is going to be exposed to the small possible range of 20-40 ppm chronically for anywhere near long enough for formic acid to matter in the long term.

Still, I wouldn't ever think about working with it outside of a hood.

[Edited on 3-11-2011 by 497]

bbartlog - 2-11-2011 at 05:28

Quote: Originally posted by Foss_Jeane  
Clorox doesn't work, though a more concentrated form ("Liquid Plumr" -- when it was still basically hypochlorite before they started putting other gunk in it) worked just fine.


Chlorox (6.15% bleach, no additives) works just fine. Granted, Chlorox also sells about a dozen other value-added forms of bleach that likely won't work.

Quote:
Keeping the reaction cool, and stirring helps greatly. Add the acetone or MEK (used both) portionwise until the color is discharged. The chloroform drops to the bottom, and is drawn off with a sep funnel. More can be distilled out of the remaining water.


Cooling is nice but not always necessary. Start with cold reagents and use 6% bleach and you don't need to cool the reaction, though it might improve yields. And don't use MEK... yields are much worse (I recall 22% the one time I used it), as far as I can tell the reaction doesn't proceed properly if the non-terminal carbon adjacent to the carbonyl is chlorinated first. And what color are you talking about? Are you adding ketone on the basis of color changes rather than measuring it? Overshooting (using too much acetone) will damage your yield.
Distilling more from the remaining water sounds good in theory but in practice is not worth it and may even yield nothing. Have you tried it?

Quote:
You can boil off the water to recover the sodium acetate or propionate.


Again, I doubt you have tried this. There is so much junk (especially in the latter case) that recovering the carboxylate in usable (mostly pure) form is a major pain. When I boiled down and evaporated a solution with the sodium acetate, it turned out to have unreacted bleach (some of which turned to sodium chlorate) as well as other side products; acidification to try to obtain acetic acid resulted in what was probably ClO2.

roXefeller - 5-4-2014 at 12:08

So I noticed something this weekend that seems clever, if only I designed it that way. It involves stratification. So I added the acetone to 8% bleach (dollar general is the best =) ) without previously icing the liquor. I really appreciate the already dissolved NaOCl and the very soluble byproducts. Anyway the mixture obviously warms up. While stirring, once it warms to a good temp that the reaction proceeds nicely without boiling the volatiles, I float the ice along the top. This sets up a nice circulation where hot products are formed midway in the vessel, rising up to the floating ice, and finally cooling and dropping to the bottom. If the volatiles start getting boil nucleation, they are easily quenched in the ice shield. So the reaction proceeds quickly with heat but doesn't lose product from boiling.
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