Organic Syntheses, CV 4, 555
Submitted by Lois J. Durham, Donald J. McLeod, and James Cason
1.
Checked by N. J. Leonard, D. H. Dybvig, and K. L. Rinehart, Jr..
1. Procedure
In a
1-l. three-necked flask fitted with a sealed
mechanical stirrer, a
125-ml. dropping funnel, a
thermometer, and a drying tube filled with
calcium chloride, are placed
500 ml. of dry benzene (Note
1) and
89.3 g. (0.5 mole) of δ-carbomethoxyvaleryl chloride (Note
2). The thermometer is adjusted to extend into the stirred liquid but not into the path of the stirrer. The mixture is cooled, with stirring, to 3–5° in an
ice bath, then
50.6 g. (0.5 mole) of triethylamine (Note
3) is added as rapidly as is consistent with keeping the temperature of the reaction mixture below 25° (3–5 minutes). When the mildly exothermic reaction has subsided, the ice bath is removed and a warm water bath is used to raise the temperature of the reaction mixture to 33–35° during 10–15 minutes. A heavy white precipitate of
triethylamine hydrochloride separates. After the reaction mixture has been warmed to about 35°, the water bath is removed and stirring is continued without heating for 30 minutes.
The reaction mixture is filtered (Note
4) with suction, and the amine salt is washed with about
200 ml. of benzene. The filtrate and washings are combined and transferred to a
1-l. round-bottomed flask,
benzene is removed at reduced pressure, and to the residue is added
500 ml. of 2N aqueous potassium hydroxide. This mixture is heated under reflux for 4 hours, by which time the solution should become completely homogeneous. The cooled solution is extracted with three
100-ml. portions of ether, then acidified to Congo red with concentrated
hydrochloric acid (approximately 95 ml.). After the solution has been cooled in ice for at least 1 hour, the precipitated white solid is collected by suction filtration, washed with water, and recrystallized from a minimal amount of hot water (105–125 ml. required at about 90°). The yield of colorless
6-ketohendecanedioic acid, m.p.
108–109° (Note
5) is
35–37 g. (
60–64%).
2. Notes
1. A quantity of thiophene-free
benzene is conveniently dried by distilling about one-fourth of it, then cooling the residue with protection from moisture by use of a
calcium chloride tube.
2. This ester acid chloride is prepared by allowing
100 g. (0.63 mole) of redistilled commercial methyl hydrogen adipate (b.p.
155–156°/7 mm.,
172–173°/13 mm.) to stand overnight at room temperature with
150 g. (1.25 moles) of thionyl chloride. A Claisen head is attached, and the
thionyl chloride is removed at aspirator pressure on a steam bath. A pump is attached, and the ester acid chloride is distilled; the yield is at least
94 g. (
84%), b.p.
114–115°/1 mm.
3.
Triethylamine purified by drying over
sodium hydroxide pellets and distilling from
α-naphthyl isocyanate was found to give no better results than amine which had been distilled through a
half-meter Vigreux column and collected over the range 89.5–90°.
4. Frequently the flocculent precipitate of
triethylamine hydrochloride is filtered with some difficulty; accordingly, a sufficiently
large Büchner funnel should be used for the filtration.
5. Titration of this acid gives an equivalent weight in the range 115–116 (theory, 115). The highest melting point recorded for this acid is
111°.2
3. Discussion
This preparation is referenced from:
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