A freshly prepared solution of
96.0 g. (2.4 moles) of sodium hydroxide, 335 ml. of water, and
220.2 g. (2.0 moles) (Note 1) of resorcinol (Note
2) is placed in a
1.3-l. hydrogenation bomb together with
40.0 g. of finely powdered nickel catalyst (Note
3). The hydrogenation is carried out under an initial pressure of about 1900 lb. of
hydrogen with agitation. The reaction is slightly exothermic, and gentle heating is applied to maintain a temperature of 45–50° (Note
4). The hydrogenation is continued until about a 10% excess of the theoretical amount of
hydrogen (2.0 moles) has been absorbed (Note
5). At this point, the agitation is stopped, and the bomb is cooled to room temperature. The reaction mixture is poured into a
1-l. beaker, and the catalyst is removed by filtration with the aid of three 50-ml. portions of water for the combined operations. The filtrate and washings are transferred to a
2-l. round-bottomed flask and treated with
33.5 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid (for partial neutralization),
145 ml. of dioxane, and
335 g. (2.4 moles) of methyl iodide (Note
6). The reaction mixture is refluxed for a total of 12–14 hours. After 7 or 8 hours, an additional
33.5 g. (0.24 mole) of methyl iodide is added. The system is cooled several hours in an
ice bath, and the
2-methyl-1,3-cyclohexanedione which crystallizes is collected by filtration (Note
7), washed with four 200-ml. portions of cold water (Note
8), and then dried in an
oven at 110°. The initial crop of dione, m.p.
206–208° dec., weighs
138–142 g. (
54–56%). The mother liquors are concentrated under reduced pressure to one-half of their original volume and are then cooled in an
ice-salt bath to yield an additional
7–11 g. (
3–5%) of slightly yellow dione which melts at
200–204° dec.
The
2-methyl-1,3-cyclohexanedione thus obtained (Note
9) can be purified by recrystallization from
95% ethanol, using about
20 ml. of ethanol for each
5 g. of product to give colorless crystals, m.p.
208–210° dec., with only minor loss of material.