In a
1.5-l. beaker (Note
1),
191 ml. (180 g.) of aqueous 25% dimethylamine solution (1.0 mole) is diluted with 64 ml. of water and treated with
116 g. (1.1 moles) of nitrourea.
2 The temperature of the resulting brownish liquid rises spontaneously to 35–42°. The solution is warmed to 56–60°, and a reaction sets in vigorously with evolution of
nitrous oxide. External cooling with water is applied when required; the reaction temperature is maintained below 70° during the first 5–7 minutes and below 85° during the second period of 5–7 minutes. After a total of 10–15 minutes, the effervescence slackens and the reaction mixture is kept at 90–100° until the evolution of gas has completely ceased. This usually requires an additional 15–20 minutes.
The resulting liquid is heated with about
1 g. of activated carbon and is filtered with suction while hot; the clear, faintly colored filtrate is transferred to an
evaporating dish and heated on a
steam bath to remove most of the water. The residual, somewhat viscous, liquid (about 120 ml.) is then transferred to a beaker; the evaporating dish is rinsed with 10 ml. of water, and this solution is added to the contents of the beaker. To this is added
95% ethanol (50 ml.), and the mixture is warmed to effect solution. On cooling, large crystals separate which, at 0°, almost fill the bulk of the solution. The crystalline mass is broken up with a
glass rod, collected on a
suction filter, and washed quickly, while on the filter, with two successive portions of ice water (Note
2), drained, and air-dried (Note
3). The yield of large, colorless prismatic crystals of
asym-dimethylurea is
35–40 g. (
40–45%); m.p.
182–184° (Note
4).
The combined filtrates, on further evaporation and dilution with
95% ethanol as above, yield an additional
15–20 g. of material of approximately the same quality, bringing the total yield up to
57–68%. In a series of preparations, yields can be further increased a few per cent by carrying over mother liquors to subsequent batches.