In a
1-l. round-bottomed flask equipped with a
reflux condenser and protected by a
calcium chloride tube are placed
150 g. (1.1 moles) of phenylacetic acid (Org. Syn. Coll. Vol. I, 1941, 436),
147 g. (1.1 moles) of freshly distilled cinnamic aldehyde,
122 g. of litharge, and
155 cc. of acetic anhydride. The mixture is boiled for five hours (Note
1), poured while still hot into a beaker, and allowed to stand overnight. The semisolid contents are stirred to a mush, filtered with suction in a
large Büchner funnel, and pressed dry. The solid is washed on the funnel with two
35-cc. portions of ethyl alcohol, the material being stirred thoroughly before suction is applied. The cake is transferred to a beaker, stirred to a mush with
50 cc. of alcohol, and again filtered with suction. The material is washed with another
50-cc. portion of alcohol in the same manner (Note
2). The product, which is light yellow to tan in color, weighs
62–67 g. (
27–29 per cent of the theoretical amount) (Note
3) and melts at
149.5–153.5°.
For purification the material is dissolved in
300 cc. of hot benzene; the solution is boiled three minutes with
5 g. of decolorizing carbon, and filtered hot, with gentle suction, through a warm Büchner funnel. The
benzene filtrate is treated with
500 cc. of hot ethyl alcohol, heated to boiling, and then cooled to 10° in an
ice bath, with shaking. After the crystals are filtered with suction and pressed thoroughly,
50 cc. of ethyl alcohol is allowed to soak into the cake and suction is applied again. The recrystallized product weighs
52–57 g. (
23–25 per cent of the theoretical amount) (Note
4) and melts at
152.5–153.5°. This product is the trans-trans form of the diene.