Organic Syntheses, CV 5, 572
Submitted by F. S. Prout, V. N. Aguilar, F. H. Girard, D. D. Lee, and J. P. Shoffner
1.
Checked by William G. Dauben and Dale L. Whalen.
1. Procedure
Potassium cyanide (71.6 g., 1.1 moles, U.S.P.) and
100 ml. of 95% ethanol are placed in a
2-l. round-bottomed flask having a ground joint and arranged with a Hershberg stirrer2 (Note
1). A solution of
113 g. (106 ml., 1 mole) of ethyl cyanoacetate,
79 g. (98 ml., 1.1 moles) of 2-butanone, and
66 ml. of glacial acetic acid is added to the stirred solution over a period of 1 hour. The mixture is stirred for an additional hour, the stirrer is removed, and the mixture is allowed to stand at room temperature for 7 days (Note
2).
Concentrated hydrochloric acid (500 ml.) is added to the semisolid reaction mixture, a
reflux condenser is placed on the flask, and the mixture is heated under vigorous reflux for a period of 4 hours (Note
3). An additional
500 ml. of hydrochloric acid is added, and the boiling under reflux is continued for an additional 4 hours.
The cooled reaction mixture is extracted (Note
4) with four portions of
ether (400 ml., 250 ml., 200 ml., 200 ml.) (Note
5) The
ether extracts are filtered and combined, and about two-thirds of the
ether is distilled. The ethereal solution is transferred to a
500-ml. Erlenmeyer flask, and the remaining
ether is removed. The residue (about 160 g.) is dissolved in
200 ml. of 24% hydrochloric acid (1 part water, 2 parts concentrated hydrochloric acid) and the solution distilled until the boiling point reaches 108° (Note
6) The solution is cooled and allowed to stand at 5° for about 20 hours. The product is collected by vacuum filtration and dried in a
vacuum desiccator containing both
concentrated sulfuric acid and potassium hydroxide pellets. The yield of
α-ethyl-α-methylsuccinic acid is
65–75 g. (
41–47%), m.p.
91–97°. Concentration of the mother liquor to 125 ml. gives an additional
8–9 g. of acid, m.p.
85–91° (Note
7).
2. Notes
1. The reaction can be run in an open flask because only a small amount of gas escapes. See (Note
3).
Sodium cyanide can be substituted for
potassium cyanide if
2 g. of β-alanine is also employed as a catalyst.
2. Heating the reaction for shorter periods gave erratic results. At this point the semisolid mixture can be diluted with 200 ml. of water, extracted with
benzene, and the
benzene extract fractionally distilled to give
ethyl 2,3-dicyano-3-methylpentanoate, b.p.
146.0–147.5° (2.5 mm.),
n27D 1.4429 (highly purified ester has b.p.
138.5–141.5° (2 mm.),
n25D 1.4432). The overall yield of
α-ethyl-α-methylsuccinic acid is decreased by about 5% when the dicyano intermediate is isolated.
4. If no layer separates on addition of the
ether, add 200 ml. of water.
5. This extraction, designed to remove organic acids from inorganic salts, may also be effected with a lighter-than-water
Kutscher-Steudel extractor.
4
6. The distillate consists of low-boiling solvents.
7. The acid can be purified further by dissolving 50 g. of it in
100 ml. of benzene. The solution is filtered, diluted with
100 ml. of hexane, and cooled to 5°. The yield of acid is
45.0 g., m.p.
97–102° (lit.
5 m.p.
101–102°).
3. Discussion
4. Merits of the Preparation
This procedure illustrates a process which should be general for many α,α-disubstituted succinic acids. It is more convenient than those previously employed because the reaction sequence is carried out in one step.
Copyright © 1921-2002, Organic Syntheses, Inc. All Rights Reserved