Sciencemadness Discussion Board

purifying toluene properly

angelhair - 14-10-2008 at 00:45

How do you purify toluene without loosing a lot of it?

I tried to clean 8L of commercial toluene (label said 1000ml/L) with 3 X 800ml commercial 98% H2SO4 (almost clear) stirring for about 20 min each time. It was sitting in an ice bath and the temp never got above 20 deg C.

So why did I loose about 1.2L? Same thing happened with Xylene.
Every thing I read said to keep below 30 deg C. Did I get sulphonation anyway? What's a girl to do?

Picric-A - 14-10-2008 at 01:56

Distill it over CaCl2 to remove water.
I dont know why you used H2SO4 as sulphonation will take place.

Panache - 14-10-2008 at 02:44

Quote:
Originally posted by Picric-A
Distill it over CaCl2 to remove water.
I dont know why you used H2SO4 as sulphonation will take place.


vogel uses this method to remove sulphur based antioxidants from commercial toluene, i simply distill it carefully in the instances i use it. Tried using the treatment you did anglehair ala vogel and was similarly difficult.

not_important - 14-10-2008 at 06:33

Fractionation followed by the Vogel treatment but using 1/4 the amount of H2SO4 he did and only a single wash with it works OK; this still includes the post-H2SO4 treatments.

At the time Vogel wrote much of the benzene and toluene on the market were from coal or petroleum processing, and contained a fair amount of sulfur analogues. Much toluene today is built from alkanes and has much lower sulfur concentration. In solvent grade it may contain methylcyclohexane and the 1 and 2 double bond analogues, washing with cold KMnO4 solution then Na2CO3, water, dry, and fractionate will get you pretty pure toluene.

You scaled Vogel's method up somewhat, 5 or 10 fold. Without real good stirring and slow acid addition, that's likely to give hot spots and more sulfonation of the toluene. Chill both the toluene and acid before mixing, too.

gsd - 14-10-2008 at 07:44

"Nitration Grade" Toluene available here (in India) for industrial use is very pure for most applications. Typical GC gives purity 99.8+% and Carl-Fischer gives moisture less than 0.05%. I believe the Toluene sold in small packing by lab chemicals suppliers and marked as "for synthesis" is directly repacked from bulk without any purification. Nor will you need any further purification unless it is required for HPLC / TLC analysis.

gsd

Klute - 14-10-2008 at 10:01

What kind of grade wa&s yout toluene? Paint strippers etc nearly always contain methanol, so if it was sucha product, the methanol stayed in the sulfuric acid as methyl sulfuric acid.... Try directly distilling it slwoly (no need of drying) witha column, and see what temps you get. If it's paint remover, I'm pretty sure you will have a methanol forerun. In that case, a conc. CaCl2 wash follwoed by drying and distillation shoudl be fine.

The traces of thiophene present will not be harmfull unless you are workign with some sensible catalyst.

angelhair - 15-10-2008 at 00:25

It's a good quality commercial grade from a chemical supplier, but it's not lab grade. It may be technical grade or probably less.

What concentration of KMnO7 is used? Will it remove the thiophenes".

Klute - 15-10-2008 at 10:23

Honestly, I don't think it worth going in the hassle of further purifying it then. there isn't much applicatiosn that require very pur toluene, unless you are working ina research lab, with sensitives catalyst or organo-metallics. Just distill it and you more than OK, IMHO.

panziandi - 18-10-2008 at 07:34

Indeed I would say just measure out 600mL portions and fractionally distil it ignore the 1st 50mL collect the following 500mL and leave 50mL in the flask. Bottle this 500mL. Then add the discarded fractions and some more toluene and repeat. This way you will purify the toluene to a suitable degree whilst also bottling it into handy sized volumes for use later. No point having large 5L or more bottles since if its something you are using frequently you will inevitably contaminate the larger bottles. If very high purity is required you can further purify smaller volumes to suit your needs. I don't have my book at hand but I'm almost certain you reflux over a small quantity of powdered potassium permanganate (something like 0.5-1% w/v?) then decant it, then dry with calcium chloride, then with sodium wire then distil from sodium under nitrogen and bottle and store over drying agent. But really such purity is not usually required. Toluene tends to be low sulphur anyway, in fact many suppliers even state that the toluene is low in sulphur. I don't see why you would need very high purity unless you are doing HPLC or something and even then you should buy HPLC grade since its been filtered and is guaranteed purity and traceable. A simple distillation will purify it enough for use in recrystalizations etc.

angelhair - 3-11-2008 at 16:10

Thanks for that, I do take your point about the amount of sulphur in the toluene of today.

Just out of curiosity, I put the toluene and H2SO4 in the freezer till about -10 deg C and mixed 3 X 25 ml acid per liter whithout distilling first.

There was hardly any loss of toluene at all but by the 3rd, as the temp increased, some increase in H2SO4 volume was noticed.

This was then washed as normal and distilled. A residue remained which became a hard white solid and burned well. I'm guessing some kind of parrafin. If I was goining to do this again, I would distill first as you guy's advised.

PS. Is toluene dryed by distillation comparable to that which is dried by CaSO4 or 4A molecular sieves?

[Edited on 3-11-2008 by angelhair]

[Edited on 3-11-2008 by angelhair]

Klute - 4-11-2008 at 05:51

If you dismiss the first 1/4 or so, you will have around 10-20 ppm I think, which is more than enough for any conventional application.

If you plan on using organo-metallics or other very water-sensible reagents, 4A MS will give you under 0.01 ppm water, as will things like LiAlH4, etc.

To be honest, I don't think extensive drying is needed for most reactions. I used distilled toluene for reaction involving formation of Mg(OMe)2, and hardly no difference than with 3A MS.
When using NaH, the difference was noticeable, but minimal (a little more H2 evolution at the beggining than with 3A MS). I'm sure fractionnated toluene could be used with NaH without any major problems in most cases if other drying means are not availble, the amount of NaOH formed being minimal, especially if the NaH is fresh.

Some quantitative results for solvent drying, from ChemKnowHow.com (excellent source):

http://chemknowhow.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=562#562

DrP - 4-11-2008 at 08:16

To dry toluene, we used to keep an amount of sodiun wire in the flask - takes out all of the water - quite important for certain polymerisations.

Klute - 4-11-2008 at 15:53

Indeed, simple distn or even CaSO4 would not be enough for anionic polymerisations... and you would need to remove the dissolved O2 anyway, so that requires sodium or LiAlH4 and inert atmospher... But is that what you need the toluene for AngelHair?

angelhair - 6-11-2008 at 15:50

I don't need super dry toluene for anything yet, it was just an academic question to fill in some knowledge gaps and I am glad there is a site like this where I can do just that.

Zinc - 26-9-2009 at 05:44

Sorry to revive an old thread, but I didnt want to open a new one for such a simple question.

I have some paint stripper that contains mostly toluene and methanol with some other aliphatic hydrocarbons. I have to remove the methanol from it but I dont have the equipment needed for distilation, wich would be the best method for removing all of the methanol from the mixture. But as methanol is miscible with water could a series of simple water washes remove most (at least 95 %) of methanol?

Jor - 26-9-2009 at 06:23

I would wash it a few times with water, followed by drying over anhydrous CaCl2. CaCl2 complexes methanol, that's why you don't dry simple alcohols with CaCl2.

Vogelzang - 26-9-2009 at 11:46

Sherwin-Williams sells gallons of toluene. No questions asked except "is that all?"

http://www.google.com/#hl=en&source=hp&q=sherwin+wil...


Zinc - 29-9-2009 at 05:24

Interesting.

Can the impure CaCl2 made by dissolving carbonate rock in hydrochloric acid be used to complex the methanol?

Picric-A - 29-9-2009 at 07:18

Yep of course

12AX7 - 29-9-2009 at 19:06

Mind that you don't get dolomite, which contains magnesium. MgCl2.6H2O is harder to crystallize and much harder to dry out (as I recall, it cannot be made anhydrous without loss of HCl).

Loads easier to just buy a sack of Damp-Rid or something.

Tim

[Edited on 9-30-2009 by 12AX7]

Jimmymajesty - 1-10-2009 at 06:06

12AX7: Yes you are right! It is dried in HCl gas to make a MgCl2 support for Ziegler Natta type catalysts.

jamit - 12-4-2011 at 18:02

Anything I should know about purifying toluene by distillation?
I intend to boil and wait for the temperature to rise to 110c before collecting the distillate. has anyone distilled hardware store toluene? Anything I should know?

jamit - 13-4-2011 at 01:32

is store bought toluene contain any water that I should be worry about? And does water and toluene form an azeotrope? Will this affect my distillation of toluene?

ItalianChemist - 13-4-2011 at 05:06

toluene can be easily purified, first being shacked with some water, to remove impurities solible in water, then being left a few minutes over Na2SO4, and dried with 24h over 3A or 4A molecular sieves!

food - 13-4-2011 at 11:11

Quote: Originally posted by jamit  
is store bought toluene contain any water that I should be worry about?


Is it reasonable to expect a useful answer to a question like this that is being put before people from all quarters of the globe, each with their own stores and brands? Perhaps a general answer. Maybe a better question would be, how to determine the purity or water content in toluene. I'm not meaning to be sarcastic or facetious. Who knows, the toluene that is available in your local store may be of a very good purity. There are many posts on here about store bought reagents that begin with an assumption that store bought = needs cleaning; who knows. I think this has the makings of some decent experimenting. If you do arrive at any conclusions about the quality of your store bought toluene I for one would be interested to hear about that. Cheers.

jamit - 13-4-2011 at 15:36

Hey, "food" you're right, the question is too general and broad. I live in the US and so I bought 1gallon of ACE hardware brand of toluene. I'm going to do a simple distillation on it and see what might remain in the distillation flask as it nears empty. I'll give you a report.

However, I am interested to hearing if anyone else has purified hardware store toluene (whatever brand) by distillation and what results and observations they notice. thanks.

food - 13-4-2011 at 19:54

I'll give my local brand a shot, I'll distill a bit of it and see how it goes. I ought to be able to do that at some time in the next couple of days. Local brand is Recochem, They've got a snazzy little icon on their products, a little cartoon retort so it's gotta be pure, right? ;) 'til then

food - 15-4-2011 at 14:25

Quote: Originally posted by food  
I'll give my local brand a shot, I'll distill a bit of it and see how it goes.


I did this. 50ml Recochem brand toluene in boiling flask with a condenser attached via an adapter. I began collecting pretty much at a 100C, the temperature rose to over 103C then dipped back to around 95C. When the mercury began rising again I swapped in a fresh collection flask. The temperature on the thermometer rose to ~109.7C and eventually ~110.1C at the conclusion, most of the time spent at 110C, on the thermometer.

When the temperature all at once fell I pulled away the foil that I'd shrouded the boiling flask with, and it appeared empty. After pulling away the hotplate a tiny bit of liquid from the flask wall accumulated under the stir bar. A drop or two.

The liquid collected at 100C-103C was a hair shy of 6ml. So this was an interesting and instructive experience for me. I am curious about my thermometer placement. And I've included a snap. From wikipedia toluene BP is 110.6C. The thermometer is labelled as total immersion. I haven't checked it against anything recently. Suitable location of bulb for taking temperature ? Lower maybe?

thermometer_bulb.jpg - 156kB

jamit - 15-4-2011 at 21:52

Hey thanks "food" for doing the experiment. I think the thermometer should be slightly lower, just at the entrance of the still head. Was there any residue on the boiling flask or any coloration changes during the distillation?

Do you know why the temperature rose to 103C and then dipped to 95C before assuming a steady 110C? Did you put the foil up to the still head from the beginning of the distillation?

Any guess as to what that 6ml was that you collected at 100-103C. It can't be toluene... maybe some additives of some sort.

I'm going to try Ace's brand of toluene purification via distillation on Monday. But thanks for trying to answer my question.


hkparker - 16-4-2011 at 08:39

Ill be distilling ace brand toluene probably later today so ill let everyone know how that goes.

EDIT:

Just went to buy the toluene at ace. I read everything on the bottle, and it says it is 100% pure toluene. From what I've found on google apparently they only list toluene as an ingredient. So is it possible I don't need to distill it, and its pure enough as is?

[Edited on 16-4-2011 by hkparker]

food - 17-4-2011 at 20:30

Quote: Originally posted by jamit  
Was there any residue on the boiling flask or any coloration changes during the distillation?


Hey. No there was no real residue left in the boiling flask, and no colour change.

Quote: Originally posted by jamit  
Do you know why the temperature rose to 103C and then dipped to 95C before assuming a steady 110C? Did you put the foil up to the still head from the beginning of the distillation?


The temperature fluctuation? Not really sure. Tentatively thinking that there is a lower boiling point fraction. I'd want to repeat this once or twice, with some care, and see how it goes.

Quote: Originally posted by jamit  
Any guess as to what that 6ml was that you collected at 100-103C. It can't be toluene... maybe some additives of some sort.


It smelled of toluene. 6ml seems like a large proportion of a 50ml batch. There's not much concrete that I'm taking away from this run. Except that my toluene, out of the can, doesn't seem to be as pure as I'd been hoping for. Not a hell of a lot in the way of conclusions, but I am a novice, and I'm still building faith in my technique. So this is good for now.
Quote: Originally posted by jamit  

I'm going to try Ace's brand of toluene purification via distillation on Monday. But thanks for trying to answer my question.



I hope that you have the time to do that. Be curious to hear about it.

hkparker - 17-4-2011 at 21:27

I used ace brand for the reaction with KMnO4 soln. and it seemed to work very well without distillation.

jamit - 18-4-2011 at 05:27

What are you talking about hkparker? Just because you used ace brand of toluene with KMnO4 doesn't mean that the toluene is pure. I've done the benzoic acid synthesis with hardware brand toluene and permanganate. I want to know how pure ace brand toluene is. My guess is that you need to do a distillation of toluene to partly determine the nature and content of the additives if any in ace's brand of toluene.

I'll let you know my results very soon.