SYNTHESIS OF BIPHENYL-2,2'-DICARBOXYLIC ACID (Diphenic acid)
- The reducing agent (a solution containing cupro-ammonia
ions) is first prepared.
- Dissolve 63g (0.25 mol) of crystallised copper(n)
sulphate in 250 ml of water in a 1 -litre beaker, add 100 ml of concentrated
ammonium hydroxide solution (d 0.88) and cool the solution to 10 °C.
- Dissolve
17.8g (0.256 mol) of hydroxylammonium chloride or 21g (0.256 mol) of
hydroxylammonium sulphate in 60 ml of water, cool to 10 °C and add 42.5 ml of 6
m sodium hydroxide solution; if the resulting solution of hydroxylamine is not
clear, filter it at the pump.
- Without delay add the hydroxylamine solution,
with stirring, to the ammoniacal copper(n) sulphate solution.
- Reduction occurs
at once, a gas is evolved and the solution assumes a pale blue colour.
- Protect
the reducing agent from the air if it is not used immediately.
- Grind 25g (0.1
8 mol) of anthranilic acid with 46 ml of concentrated hydrochloric acid and 75
ml of water in a glass mortar, and transfer the suspension to a 500-ml
round-bottomed flask which is provided with a mechanical stirrer.
- Cool the
contents of the flask in an ice bath to 0-5°C, and add a solution of 13.0g
(0.19 mol) of sodium nitrite in 175 ml of water from a dropping funnel during
about 20 minutes.
- Keep the diazonium solution below 5 °C and, if it is not
clear, filter it by suction through a chilled Buchner funnel immediately before
use.
- Surround the reducing solution in the 1-litre beaker (which is equipped
with a mechanical stirrer) with a bath of crushed ice so that the temperature
of the solution is about 10 °C.
- Attach, by means of a short length of rubber
tubing, to the stem of a dropping funnel a glass tube which dips well below the
surface of the solution and is bent upwards at the end and constricted so that
the opening is about 2 mm (this arrangement ensures that the diazonium solution
reacts with the ammoniacal solution in the beaker and prevents the latter
rising in the stem of the funnel).
- Place about 45 ml of the cold diazonium solution in the funnel and add it at the rate of
about 10 ml per minute while the mixture is stirred.
- Add the remainder of the
diazonium solution at the same rate; continue the stirring for 5 minutes after
the addition is complete.
- Heat the solution rapidly to boiling and carefully
acidify with 125 ml of concentrated hydrochloric acid; the diphenic acid
precipitates as pale brown crystals.
- Allow to stand overnight and filter with
suction; wash the crude diphenic acid with about 25 ml of cold water.
- Suspend
the crude acid in 100 ml of water and add 20g of solid sodium hydrogen
carbonate.
- Filter the resulting solution by gravity, and then boil with about
0.5g of decolourising carbon; filter and acidify the filtrate while still hot
with excess of dilute hydrochloric acid (1:1).
- Collect the precipitated diphenic
acid on a Buchner funnel, wash it with 20 ml of cold water and dry at 100 °C.
The yield of diphenic acid is 18g (82%); it melts at 227-228 °C and usually
possesses a light cream colour.
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