Submitted by E. B. Vliet
Checked by Roger Adams and E. E. Dreger.
1. Procedure
In a
5-l. round-bottomed, two-necked flask, fitted with a
reflux condenser and a
mechanical stirrer with a
mercury seal, are placed 660 cc. of cold water and 135 g. of cracked ice.
Two hundred grams (containing about 1.4 moles of pure calcium cyanamide) of fresh lime-nitrogen (Note
1) is added slowly, with stirring. As soon as the lime-nitrogen is suspended thoroughly in the water, a cold solution of
110 g. (2.75 moles) of
sodium hydroxide in 200 cc. of water is added slowly, with stirring. Then the suspension is stirred quite briskly during one hour. If the temperature rises above 25°, small amounts of ice should be added (Note
2).
To the solution of
sodium cyanamide thus prepared,
380 g. (3.14 moles) of allyl bromide (Note
3) and
660 cc. of 95 per cent alcohol are added. The mixture is then heated on a
water bath with good stirring until it refluxes gently, and the heating and stirring are continued for two and one-half hours. Then the reflux condenser is replaced by one set downward for distillation. The stirring is continued and the
alcohol is distilled until about 500 cc. has been collected. The distillate may be discarded or used for the recovery of
alcohol (Note
4).
The reaction mixture is cooled to room temperature and filtered with suction through a
large Büchner funnel. The residue is washed with
alcohol. The filtrate which will be in two layers, is extracted twice with
benzene, first with 270 cc. and then with 130 cc. The combined
benzene extracts are dried with
sodium sulfate and then filtered into a
distilling flask. The
benzene is distilled from a
water bath, and then the
diallylcyanamide is distilled under reduced pressure. It boils at
105–110°/18 mm.; at
128–133°/57 mm.; and at
140–145°/90 mm. There is a small residue of higher-boiling material. The yield of
diallylcyanamide, boiling over a 5° range, is
90–97 g. (
52–56 per cent of the theoretical amount based on the
calcium cyanamide) (Note
5).
2. Notes
1. The lime-nitrogen used in this preparation should be the crude untreated product sold as fertilizer under the name "Cyanamid." It contains approximately
55 per cent calcium cyanamide, 20 per cent calcium oxide, 12 per cent graphite, and small amounts of various impurities. Lime-nitrogen should be protected from moisture when stored, in order to prevent slow polymerization to
dicyanodiamide. It is advisable to use a fresh supply of lime-nitrogen for this synthesis.
2. Stirring for one hour in the cold permits the relatively insoluble
calcium cyanamide to react with
sodium hydroxide and go into solution as
sodium cyanamide. If the temperature is not kept below 25° during this time, there is some tendency for polymerization to
dicyanodiamide.
4. No
allyl bromide is recovered. When water is added to the
alcohol distillate, which would undoubtedly contain any unused
allyl bromide, none separates. The excess probably reacts to form
allyl alcohol. However, no attempt has been made to isolate it.
5. This represents a general procedure for the preparation of dialkylcyanamides; for example,
di-n-butylcyanamide has been prepared in a similar manner, in yields of about
50 per cent of the theoretical amount.
3. Discussion
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