Organic Syntheses, CV 5, 1096
Submitted by H. Meerwein
1
Checked by O. Vogl, B. C. Anderson, and B. C. McKusick.
1. Procedure
Freshly prepared
triethyloxonium fluoborate2 (170 g., 0.90 mole) is dissolved in
500 ml. of anhydrous methylene chloride in a
1-l. three-necked flask equipped with a
stirrer,
gas-inlet tube, and
drying tube (Note
1). The reaction flask is immersed in an
ice bath, the stirrer is started, and
138 g. (3.00 moles) of dry dimethyl ether is passed into the solution from a
tared cylinder over a period of about 2 hours. The reaction mixture is allowed to stand overnight at room temperature. An hour after the addition of
dimethyl ether is complete,
trimethyloxonium fluoborate begins to separate. The initially liquid product solidifies slowly.
The stirrer is replaced by a filter stick, and the supernatant
methylene chloride is withdrawn from the crystalline mass of
trimethyloxonium fluoborate;
nitrogen is admitted through a bubbler during this operation to prevent atmospheric moisture from entering the flask. The crystals are washed with three
100-ml. portions of anhydrous methylene chloride. The flask is transferred to a
dry box, and
trimethyloxonium fluoborate is collected on a
sintered-glass filter, dried for 2 hours in a
vacuum desiccator at 25° (1 mm.), and bottled in a stream of dry
nitrogen. The fluoborate is colorless; yield
114–124 g. (
86–94%). Rapidly heated in an
open capillary tube, it sinters and darkens, with decomposition, at
141–143° (Note
3).
2. Notes
1. In order to obtain maximum yields, all operations must be carried out under rigorously dry conditions. The apparatus should be dried in an
oven at 110°, assembled while hot, and cooled in a stream of dry
nitrogen. The checkers dried the
methylene chloride over PA 100 silica gel (12–28 mesh) obtained from Davison Chemical Co., Baltimore, Maryland.
3. The decomposition point varies widely, depending on rate of heating and apparatus. Professor S. H. Pine, California State College at Los Angeles, informed the checkers that he observed decomposition at
210–220°, with the salt totally disappearing and (CH
3)
2OBF
3 forming on the wall of the capillary tube above the bath. This prompted the checkers to study the decomposition by differential thermal analysis. At a heating rate of 30°/min., there was an endotherm peak at 142°, with sample all gone by 200°. At 15°/min., the peak was at 155°, with sample all gone by 180°.
3. Discussion
The procedure used is essentially that described by Meerwein and co-workers.
3 The salt has also been prepared from the same reagents in a
sealed tube.
4
4. Merits of the Preparation
This preparation is referenced from:
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