Trimethyl benzene
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Chemical formula | C9H12 |
---|---|
OTP appearance | clear colorless liquid |
Index of refraction | 1.49541 |
Molar Mass(g/mol) | 120.19 |
Density(g/cc) | 0.8637 |
Melting Point(°C) | -44.8 |
Boiling Point(°C) | 164.7 |
Solubility in water(g/L) | non |
NFPA 704 |
Uses
Justification Questioned
Other
- Preferred extractant for ABE Fermentation
- An aromatic compound that can be created from non-aromatic compounds
- Precursor to key industrial chemical benzene, 1,3-dimethylbenzene and other aromatics
Natural occurrence
- Trimethyl benzene does not occur naturally.
Hazards
Production
Synthesis
from propanone
Trimethyl benzene is produced in a very slow (2 days per campaign) and inefficient (15% yield) process from propanone.[1]
- Dehydrate propanone using sulfuric acid
- Slowly (over hours) add sulfuric acid to chilled propanone, never allowing the temperature to exceed 10°C.
- 3 C3H6O{H2SO4C9H12 + 3 H2O0-10°C 5-10h}→
- 3 C3H6O
- Continue to mix for 3-4 hrs
- Allow temp to rise to room temperature and stand for 18-24 hours
- Steam distill
- Heat until sulfur dioxide begins to form, continue until it stops
- Steam distil for three minutes, collecting a rich water/trimethyl benzene phase
- Retain distillate as "distillate 1"
- Continue to distil for 17 minutes, collecting dilute trimethyl benzene
- Retain distillate as "distillate 2"
- Separate/Wash both distillates in the same way
- Allow the distillates to stand until they separate into two layers (top: trimethyl benzene, bottom: water)
- Discard bottom layer
- Combine the distillate with sodium hydroxide
- Agitate until no scent of sulfur dioxide is noted
- Wash twice with water
- Distill, retaining everything up to 210°C
- Sodium purification, removing aldehyde and ketone side-products
- Combine all distillates
- Add sodium metal
- Heat (reflux) at just below bp for 3h
- Distill until volume is 1/3 original
- Discard distillate
- Filter
- Discard residue
- Fractionally distill residue
- Retain fraction at 163-167°C
Accounts
400 g of clean dry sand are placed in a 2000 ml retort connected with a condenser. 250 g of acetone are added, and then a cooled mixture of 560 g of concentrated sulfuric acid and 150 g of water is run in, in a slow continuous stream, the retort being meantime cooled in cold water. After 24 hours standing, the mixture is slowly distilled, directly or in steam. When oily drops appear in the neck of the retort, the receiver is changed, and the distillate collected until only very small quantities of the oil appear. The color of the liquid (if directly distilled) changes to deep brown, and finally to black, sulfur dioxide is evolved, and the mass froths up considerably. The upper yellowish layer of the distillate is separated from the lower aqueous layer, washed with sodium hydroxide and water, and dehydrated over calcium chloride. It is then fractionated, the fraction 100-200° C being redistilled four times over thin slices of metallic sodium, when about two-thirds of it is obtained as pure mesitylene coming over at 161-166° C. Yield variable, about 25% theoretical (40 g). Colorless, strongly refracting liquid; b.p. 163° C; d= 0.8694 at 10° C.[2]
See Also
- Benzene
- Wheeler, Henry L.; Hoffman, Charles (1910) "ALKYLATION OF AROMATIC AMINO ACIDS AMINOMETHYLBENZOIC ACIDS"
American Chemical Journal 44 Eschenbach printinc company
link courtesy Google Books.
References
- ↑ (1922) "Mesitylene" (local copy)
Organic Syntheses; pp41.
DOI:10.15227/orgsyn.002.0041
link courtesy orgsyn.org. - ↑ Cumming, W. M. (1937) "Systematic organic chemistry".