Untitled Essay, Research Paper
The purpose of this laboratory assignment was two-fold, first, we were to
demonstrate the extraction of acids and bases, finally, determining what unknowns were
present. Second, we were to extract caffeine from tea. These two assignment will be
documented in two separate entities.Introduction: Acid/base extraction involves carrying out simple acid/base reactions in
order to separate strong organic acids, weak organic acids neutral organic compounds
and basic organic substances. The procedure for this laboratory assignment are on the
following pages.3) Separation of Carboxylic Acid, a Phenol and a Neutral Substance The purpose of this acid/base extraction is to separate a mixture of
equal parts of
benzoic acid(strong acid) and 2-naphthanol(weak base) and
1,4-dimethoxybenzene(neutral) by extracting from tert-butylmethyl ether(very
volatile).The goal of this experiment was to identify the three components in the mixture
and to determine the percent recovery of each from the mixture.4) Separation of a Neutral and Basic Substance A mixture of equal parts of a neutral substance containing either
naphthalene or
benzoin and a basic substance containing either 4-chloroaniline or ethyl 4-aminobenzoate
were to be separated by extraction from an ether solution. Once the separation took
place, and crystallization was carried out, it became possible to determine what
components were in the unknown mixture, by means of a melting point determination.
Results
Procedure Observations InferenceDissolve 3.05g Phenol Mixture was a golden-
Neutral acid in 30ml brown/yellow color
t-butyl methyl ether in
Erlenmeyer flask and transfer
mixture to 125ml separatory
funnel using little ether to
complete the transferAdd 10 ml of water
Organic layer=mixture
aqueous layer=water(clear)Add 10 ml saturated aqueous Sodium
bicarbonate NaHCO3 dissolves in
solution sodium bicarbonate
water.
to funnel and mix cautiously
with stopper onVent liberated carbon
Carbon dioxide gas
dioxide and shake the mixture was released three times
thoroughly with frequent venting
of the funnelAllow layers to separate Layer = H2O +NaHCO3
completely and draw off
lower layer into 50ml Erlenmeyer
flask 1Add 10ml of 1.5 aqueous NaOH Flask 2 = H2O + NaHCO3
(5ml of 3M and 5ml H2O) to
separatory funnel, shake mixture,
allow layers to separate and draw
off lower layer into a 25ml
Erlenmeyer flask 2. Add additional
5ml of water to funnel, shake as beforeAdd 15 ml NaCl to funnel. Shake Bottom layer is white and
NaCl was added to
the mixture and allow layers to separate gooey. wash the ether
and draw off lower layer, which is layer and to remove
discarded organic substances
NaOH and NaHCO3
Pour ether layer into 50ml
Erlenmeyer flask from the top
of the separatory funnel
(not allowing any water
droplets to be transferred)
Flask 3Add anhydrous NaSO4
to ether extract until it no
longer clumps together
and set it asideAcidify contents of flask 2 Litmus went from
Acidification was now
by dropwise addition of blue to pink.
Flask complete
concentrated HCl while 2 = creamy color
testing with litmus paper
and cool in iceAcidify contents of flask 1 Litmus went from
Acidification was now
by adding HCl dropwise blue to pink. Flask
complete
while testing with litmus 2 = white solution
paper and cool in iceDecant ether from flask
3 into a tared flaskBoil ether with boiling chipsDo a vacuum filtration and Solution turns
to a Crystallization is now
recrystallize ether by dissolving it solid. complete
in 5ml, taking out boiling chips,
adding drops of Ligroin until the
solution was cloudy and cool it
in iceIsolate crystals from flask 2 by Crystals = creamy-white Dried crystals
are now
vacuum filtration and wash with powder
ready for melting point
a small amount of ice water
determination
and recrystallize it from boiling
waterRepeat the above for flask 1 Crystals = white
powderFlasks number 4 and 5 were done by the following diagram.
Results:As a result of this acid/base experiment, the following results were obtained:
Flask 1: 31.113g
-30.223g
.890g
Flask 2: 36.812g
-36.002g
.810g
Flask 3: 90.789g
-90.114g
.065g
% yield = experimental weight x 100%
theoretical weight
Flask 1: .890g x 100% = 89%
1.00g
Flask 2: .810g x 100% = 81%
1.00g
Flask 3: .675g x 100% = 67.5%
1.00g
When taking the melting points of the unknowns, flasks 4 and 5, I came
to the
conclusion that the samples contained, benzoin, melting point of 136-137Degrees(C) and
4-chloroaniline, melting point of 67-80 degrees(C), respectively.Flask 4: 90.912g
-89.174g
1.738g% yield = 1.738g x 100% = 90.4%
1.922g
Flask 5: 87.833g
-86.064g
1.769g
% yield = 1.769g x 100% = 87.3%
2.027g
Conclusion: After each procedure was complete, it became apparent that fla
4 and
flask number 5 contained benzoin and 4-chloroaniline, respectively. The melting point
range that was experimentally determined for each was 136-137 for benzoin and 67-70
for 4-chloroaniline. As you can see, this experiment was not error-free, as my percentage
yield was not 100%. This is expected for any experiment; for there is no way that, under
the conditions, this experiment can be free of error. This error could have occurred for
many reasons. The most prevalent reason, I feel that maybe not all of the substance was
transferred from the flask to the vacuum, giving a slight error. Also, some residue could
have also been left in the vacuum funnel when transferring the crystal substances.
Questions2) It is necessary because nothing would come out of the stopcock- the reason for this is
because of pressure. Leaving the stopper on, would decrease the pressure pushing down
on the liquid and the pressure pushing upward would prevail, allowing nothing to escape.3) I would not expect p-nitrophenol (pka = 7.15) to dissolve NaHCO3(pka = 6.4) because
having a weak acid and a weak base, the reaction would favor the products, not the
reactants, hence, the reaction would not proceed forward. I would expect
2,5-dinitrophenol(pka = 5.15) to dissolve in NaHCO3 the reaction would proceed
forward.5) a) 1g benzoic acid x 1mol = .00699 mol benzoic acid
143g benzoic acidb) 1ml 10% solution NaHCO3 x 1g_ x 1mol = .00116 mol NaHCO3
4ml 96g NaHCO3
.00699 moles of benzoic acid
Introduction: The purpose of the second part of this laboratory assignment was to
extract
caffeine from tea using dichloromethane and then to confirm the identity of it by
preparing a derivative of the extracted caffeine which has a sharp melting point, unlike
caffeine itself. Once the extraction was complete, we were to test for melting point and
get a HPLC reading for our derivative.Discussion: Tea leaves contain acidic, colored compounds as well as a small amount
of
undecomposed chlorophyll, which is soluble in dichloromethane. Caffeine can be easily
extracted from tea. This procedure can be done using conventional methods. Simply
pouring hot water on the tea bags and steeping the bags for about 5-7 minutes would
extract most of the caffeine that the tea contains. Pure caffeine itself is a white,
bitter,
odorless crystalline solid, therefore, it is obvious that more than just caffeine is in
the
liquid tea solution since tea is a brown color. Because of this, dichloromethane is used
to
dissolve the caffeine that is in the tea, which leaves the other constituents in the
aqueous
layer. Using a separatory funnel, it becomes possible to extract the dissolved caffeine
from the aqueous layer and the extraction is now ready for further procedure.
Results
Procedure Observation InferenceTo a 250ml beaker
containing 7 tea bags,
add 100ml of boiling
water.Allow the mixture to stand Brown aqueous
solution
for 5-7 minutes while steeping containing caffeine and
the tea from the bags other impurities.Decant the mixture into
another flaskCool solution to near
Dichloromethane =
room temperature and
water soluble, clear,
extract twice with 15ml heavier that water.
portions of dichloromethane
using a gentle rocking motion
and venting. Drain off dichloromethane Dichloromethane
Evaporation of the
layer on first extraction; organic layer found
solvent leaves crude
include emulsion layer on on the bottom of
the caffeine, which on
the second extraction.
funnel where the sublimation, yields
caffeine is dissolved. a relatively pure
Chlorine = top, aqueous product.
solution.Drain extraction 1 and 2
back into the funnelDry combined dichloromethane The solvent layer is
solutions and any emulsion yellow.
layer with sodium sulfateWash the drying agent
Residue of greenish
with further portions of white crystalline
weighs
solvent and steam bath 50mg(solid)
the solventTo 5mg of the
Salicylic acid is water
sublimed caffeine in water soluble.
beaker, add 7.5mg of
salicylic acid and .5 ml
of dichloromethane.Heat mixture to a boil Petroleum ether is a poor
and add a few drops solvent for the product.
petroleum ether until
the mixture turns cloudy.Insulate beaker and allow
it to cool slowly to room
temperature and then cool
in an ice bathRemove the solvent with Needle-like crystals are
Caffeine salicylate is
a Pasteur pipette while the isolated(white color)
formed.
beaker is in the ice bath
then vacuum filter.
Caffeine beaker: 51.61g
-51.56g
.05g = 50mg
% yield = .05g x 100% = 20%
.25g
Caffeine salicylate: 17.198g
-17.036g
.062g% yield = .062g x 100% = 25%
.25g
Conclusion
According to the HPLC graph that follows, my product was very pure. The
actual
melting point of caffeine salicylate is 137 degree(C), my product was found to have a
melting point of 138 degrees (C). As before, of course this experiment was not done
completely error-free, the error is due almost entirely on human error.