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Author: Subject: Benzene synthesis
ordenblitz
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[*] posted on 19-9-2004 at 14:25


Thanks Marvin.

It's all easy if you have the tools. Fortunately for me, I don't have a wife to dictate where the money will be spent therefore I am free to explore the limits of my chemical dependency as it were.

There is a purge port on the ftir and you are supposed to flush with N2 or dry air. Nitrogen is preferable since this will eliminate both the CO2 and H2O peaks. I don't use the thing often enough to justify the effort and expense, so I have to apply the appropriate software correction and deal with some loss of accuracy.
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Organikum
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[*] posted on 19-9-2004 at 15:09


Marvin, the water is coming from my faucet, just a quick wash with bicarb/brine and I put always some water into my receiving jar for its easier to see when it starts coming over, dropping.

In the distillation some minimal amounts of water come over, probably from the NaOH sucking water from the air whilst grinding.

Benzoate and grinded NaOH are not ground together, they are merely mixed well, barmixer style.....
Grinding NaOH does not harm my coffee-grinder, benzoate does. Puff and out. Deflagration is the right word I believe, grinding benzoate and NaOH with mortar and pestle is for masochists and plain not necessary. Gladly I want to add.


ordenblitz, I get the cans when I buy solvents over the street in the paints store, looks like this:
http://www.sciencemadness.org/scipics/solventcans.jpg
And I have more than one, one makes about three to four runs and then its finished.
;)




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stygian
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[*] posted on 19-9-2004 at 20:04


Quote:
Originally posted by notagod
If I remeber right, it does'nt have to be benzoic acid, the sodium salt will do. Mix it with waterfree sodium carbonate and heat it gently. Benzene will distill over. You can also have some sand mixed in to have a more "smooth" reaction.


Does this mean sodium salicylate + sodium carbonate == phenol? :)
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[*] posted on 20-9-2004 at 08:45


I'm not convinced by sodium carbonate but salicylic acid decarboxlyates a lot easier than benzene. Its also more, for want of a better word, fragile. Heating salicylic acid with lime will work, or with plain sand will also work. I dont know what the yeilds are like but yes this will make phenol.

Organikum, I was wondering if it was washing water, and I couldnt figure out how else such a large molar amount of water would come from, but since it was just described as the distillate I did wonder.

ordenblitz, I have the main unit of a much older nicolet insument and it has an air bearing! Needs compressed air supply and I dont know what pressure. No interface card so I cant try it, not sure if it would work or not. I know complete working units (even secondhand) are out of my price band though. I also bought a dual beam instument on ebay but I was unlucky and everything of value inside had been stripped.
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[*] posted on 24-9-2004 at 13:00


I had an idea,but I don´t know,if it would work.If phthalic anhydride is dissolved in a solvent,phthalic acid can be precipitated by adding HCl(aq).The structure of phthalic acid is C6H4(COOH)2.If phthalic acid is heated,I think CO2 is released and benzene distills over.But I am not sure,if it is right.
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Organikum
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[*] posted on 24-9-2004 at 14:28
Simplified Setup


For not having to use my glassware anymore for the benzene from benzoate synthesis a made this simplified setup from pieces I had around, mostly coppertube and Teflon-tape.






Works fine. :D




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S.C. Wack
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[*] posted on 24-9-2004 at 14:34


True, but not mentioned before because for most it isn't as cheap, or as easy to buy or make (toluene/KMnO4/Na2CO3).
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Organikum
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[*] posted on 9-10-2004 at 03:46
Interesting observation with benzoate to benzene


When the product of the sodium-benzoate destructive distillation is NOT washed with water before distillation a clear distillate with a sharp pungent smell comes over at about 70°C. This is obviously an azeotrope of benzene with an unknown compound.

This compound is water sensible. I say so because of the fizzling sounds which are to notice when the distillate of the benzoate-pyrolysis is collected in a jar filled with water.

Whats this?
Some anhydride and maybe useful?

Any ideas?
Its not the diphenyl, thats the yellow contamination.




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[*] posted on 15-10-2004 at 11:13


Nice job with the improvements Organikum. :)
This way to benzene seems so easy that someone should document it into a pdf so it will never be lost. :P

As a side note I'm really happy with my ~1l of benzene at the moment. :D
Azo dyes, here I come!

[Edited on 15.10.2004 by IPN]
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[*] posted on 16-10-2004 at 08:34


I will compile this pdf document for having the pictures its probably up to me I guess.

no hurry please.
ORG




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[*] posted on 26-11-2004 at 19:46


I want to know if there is a way to extract benzene from polystyrene?

thanks.




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[*] posted on 27-11-2004 at 13:00


'Extraction' wouldn't be possible. Pyrolysis to styrene, oxidation to benzoic acid and finally decarboxylation to benzene is a viable synthesis however.

[Edited on 27-11-2004 by UpNatom]
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[*] posted on 10-3-2005 at 19:43


I recently decided I needed some benzene so have read this thread with great interest. I have a procedure for decarboxylation of benzoic acid in my old college lab manual, i.e., "Unitized Experiments in Organic Chemistry," by Brewster et al (1961). It is an abbreviated version of that in Norris posted by S. C. Wack. The procedure intrigues me as I had never seen a "dry distillation" procedure before. I wondered how it could work.

I started with Na benzoate (small prills) and Red Devil lye (very small prills).

My first 2 attempts resulted in failure. That is I did the same thing twice and got the same results twice ;). Then I decided I wasn't giving it enough heat so bought a new, full propane cylinder and tried it again. This time I got a few drops of benzene - still a failure. The 4th time I dried the paste mixture of Na benzoate/NaOH/H2O for 2 hours at 100C in an oven and then ground it to a powder in a mortar & pestle. I then placed half of it in the 25x200mm test tube, keeping it dry with a rubber stopper until ready for use. Then I really put the heat to it until I could see the NaOH melting and reacting with the Na benzoate. This was effective and all benzoate reacted leaving just the NaOH, (Na2CO3?), and patches of carbon black. The benzene looked to be in good yield but has an orange color.

The other half of the batch I placed in the 25x200mm test tube with a copper scrub pad. This gave the same result but was harder to observe and control during heating. I found it notable that the copper pad seemed unaffected by the molten NaOH.

I agree with previous observations that the main issue here is with good heat transfer. When I was just using the paste my heat transfer was terrible. With the dry powder it lay nicely in the bottom of the horizontal test tube. In a few days I will try a full batch in the test tube.

The waste products in the test tube wash out easily. However, the molten NaOH does permanently etch the test tube somewhat clouding it. But it is completely reuseable, at least for the this same procedure.

I agree with Marvin and vulture that much satisfaction comes from making useful reagents from OTC ingredients, especialy when it is a challenge. :D

When I get access to a scanner I will post my 1961 lab manual to the forum library. It is remarkably different in scope from my current lab manual (Pavia, Kriz, et al).

[Edited on 11-3-2005 by Magpie]

[Edited on 11-3-2005 by Magpie]

[Edited on 11-3-2005 by Magpie]

[Edited on 11-3-2005 by Magpie]




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[*] posted on 10-3-2005 at 21:01


I also ran across some interesting information that could lead to benzene lately. DMSO decarboxylates a number of compounds at very low temps (~30 - 50C), benzoic acid could be heated with DMSO and benzene would (in theory) continuously distill off, just add more benzoic acid when the distillation started to slack. You could really get away cheap by oxidizing the toluene yourself with an aquarium pump bubbling air through toluene under water in the presence of some transition metal catalyst (or so I've been lead to believe).



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Organikum
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[*] posted on 11-3-2005 at 04:59


Shit, most of my pictures are missing, I will upload them again later.



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[*] posted on 11-3-2005 at 21:31
historical reference


I thought it would be interesting to read the original journal article on this method by E. Mitscherlich as published in "Annalen der Chemie" (1834). I will post it in the original German and hope someone will translate it to English. Sorry I can't post the whole article but I was getting writer's cramp as it is. My apologies for lack of proper notation on some of the "e's". I hope it is still translatable. Here is what appears to be the most meaningful excerpt:

Ueber das Benzol und die Sauren der Oel- und Talgarten

Das Benzol (Benzin)

Mengt man Benzoesäure mit einer starken Base, woyon man mehr nimmt als hinreichend ist um die doppelte Menge. Benzoesäure zu sättigen, mengt man z. B. 1 Th. Benzoesäure mit 3 Th. gelöschter Kalkerde, und unterwirit das Gemenge der Destillation, so geht zuerst Wasser und zuletzt eine dünnflüssige ölartige Flüssigkeit über, welche auf dem Wasser schwimmt. Wenn man das Gemenge sehr langsam erwarmt, so ist der Rückstand in der Retorte vollkommen farblos, und läfst beim Auflösen in Säure, wobei sich Kohlensäure entwickelt, keine Spur eines Rückstandes zuruck; die Auflösung in der Säure ist farblos, und es wird keine Gasart bei der destillation entwickelt. Die Benzoesäure zerlegt sich also in Kohlensäure und in die ölartige Flüssigkeit. Die ölartige Flüssigkeit kann man vom Wasser vollständig trennen, wenn man sie mit der Pipette abnimmt, dann mit etwas Kali schüttelt und destilliert. Läftst man Kalium lange Zeit mit dieser Flüssigkeit in Berührung, oder destillirt man sie damit, so bleibt die Oberfläche des Kaliums metallisch glänzend, so dafs sie also keinen Sauerstoff enthalt. Da diese Flüssigkeit aus der Benzoesäure gewonnen wird, und wahrscheinlich mit den Benzoylverbindungen im Zusammenhang steht, so gibt man ihr am besten den Namen Benzol, da der Name Benzoyn shon für die dem Bittermandelöl isomerische Verbinung von Liebig und Wöhler gewählt worden ist.




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Organikum
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[*] posted on 12-3-2005 at 04:02


Mixing benzoic acid and calcium hydroxide 1/3 w/w followed by distillation yields an oily layer on water which is redistilled and the resulting liquid is christened "benzene" as the name benzoyl was already taken for something else.

/ORG




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[*] posted on 12-3-2005 at 06:52


Thanks for the translation abstract organikum. Is the rest of the text irrelevant? If you would have the time I would appreciate a full translation out of curiosity and historical interest. ;)



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[*] posted on 12-3-2005 at 07:14


The rest says, that the residue in the retort is colorless, dissolves in acid and CO2 is evolved, the resulting solution is also colorless. The distillation (of the benzoic acid and calcium hydroxide) produces no gases, ergo the reaction splits CO2 from the benzoic acid.
Potassium added to the benzene keeps its metallic surface, so this "benzene" contains no oxygen.

Thats really all whats written.




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ordenblitz
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[*] posted on 17-7-2005 at 16:26


Taking a big jump up in size to see if economy of scale applies in this case, I constructed the following monster distillation setup.
http://img178.imageshack.us/img178/3643/cansetup2jq.jpg

You can see the lead in end of the water jacketed condenser I whipped up for the occasion. Here is the other end in a 2000ml. bottle waiting to receive its load.
http://img178.imageshack.us/img178/4406/collect3ym.jpg

In the can was put 4 or 5 shredded stainless steel scrubber pads, for a conduction aid and a specially wet granulated, densified and beaded mix of 2500 gm sodium benzoate + 1250 gm calcium hydroxide. I prefer to use Ca(OH)2 since I have to use less personal protection when mixing and granulating. Clean up is easier and of course the stuff is cheaper.
http://img178.imageshack.us/img178/2382/granulation6yp.jpg

I cranked up this monster and after waiting 3 hours for about 250ml I got frustrated and broke out the Big burner and commenced to roasting that bastard! You can see I just disconnected the other burner and slipped in the big guns. I had that can pretty red!
http://img178.imageshack.us/img178/9587/bigburn8ic.jpg

After another hour or two, when things started to slow down I shut it down and this is what I got.
http://img178.imageshack.us/img178/308/yellow0fp.jpg

650 stinking milliliters for all that hard work and waiting, pathetic! I expected about 1500ml. After opening the can I noticed that most of the center of the mass was un-reacted and the top looked all but untouched. I had the lower 1/3 of the can cherry red after the 3rd hour. Organikum was right on the money about the poor heat conductivity of the reacted mass. I really thought that if I just upped the heat input, I could convince the thing to happen. Hmm maybe someone should look at this material for heat shielding because it's conductive properties are crap. I think I blew through a full cylinder of propane doing it.

My conclusion is that scaling this reaction up without a lot of fairly technical hardware, is probably just not worth the effort.

Washed and ready to distill!

sep.JPG - 23kB
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[*] posted on 17-7-2005 at 19:43


Sounds like you need a refractory lined furnace. :D

If conductivity is the problem you say it is, it might be worth say pressing into cakes and/or only using smaller retorts- anything with more surface area and thinner cross section.

It could well appear to be low in conductivity due to heat consumption as well as insulation; I imagine the reaction is mostly endothermic, especially with the evaporation. Calcium carbonate powder isn't exactly known for its conductivity, at least as a porous lump.

BTW, can PETE be pyrolyzed/decarboxylated to ethylene/ethane and benzene (or other aromatics)? Plenty of it around. It's a polyester of pthalic acid and ethylene glycol, plus whatever modifiers they used.

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[*] posted on 18-7-2005 at 12:37


A valiant effort Ordenblitz! Indeed you have confirmed the poor heat transfer inherent in dry powder. What you need is a minature lime kiln with tilted, rotating cylinder and hanging chains to keep the powder mixed. ;)

I'm impressed with your equipment framework, stainless steel drain, etc. Is all that your own personal equipment?




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ordenblitz
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[*] posted on 18-7-2005 at 15:40


(Quote)
---------------------------------------------------
What you need is a miniature limekiln with tilted, rotating
Cylinder and hanging chains to keep the powder mixed.
---------------------------------------------------

That’s a good idea. I could put some ceramic milling media with the feed stock in the cylinder, rotate it for a while to grind everything up nicely and then turn on the heat. Now all I have to do is figure out some sort of high temp banjo fitting for the out port and I am in the benzene business.


(Quote)
---------------------------------------------------
I'm impressed with your equipment framework, stainless
steel drain, etc. Is all that your own personal equipment?
---------------------------------------------------

Thanks. Yes it's mine. I picked up this hood in a refinery auction for $100 All I had to do was build a pedestal for it and run some duct work to a restaurant style exhaust fan and viola' The frame is a Fisher monkey bar kit that I installed and even anodized a few of the pieces black. I am going to do a post about do it yourself anodizing when I get around to it.

I've had quite a few years to put my lab together. Some people have expensive boats or 4 wheelers etc. I have a chemical dependency.

[Edited on 18-7-2005 by ordenblitz]

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[*] posted on 18-7-2005 at 15:59


Stir it up - but like you say more technical equipment required.

Keep it stirred with a huge mechanical stirrer. Ok stop laughing.

You gotta use stainless as the reaction vessel then put a old speaker magnet on a motor shaft. Plug it into a variac. Use teflon tape coated steel bar for the stir bar. Maybe an epoxy stir bar would last a short time in the hot alkali.

[Edited on 18-7-2005 by jimwig]
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[*] posted on 18-7-2005 at 18:22


$100 for a fume hood! Together with your FTIR spectrometer you have really picked up some bargains. :P

I just happened to be in the middle of building a fume hood system in my garage using parts purchased from local non-scientific sources like Home Depot. I'm using a 475 cfm (@ 0.75" H2O) open one-side blower, SS316 discharge duct, and 8" PVC suction ducting. The hood will be epoxy coated wood 48" wide x 46" high x 28" deep. It will be a constant volume bypass type using a tempered glass sash with PVC frame. I had the SS316 discharge piece fabricated by a sheet metal shop. The blower will sit in my rafters. My total cost will be over $1000 just for materials. :o




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