Submitted by George H. Coleman, Gust Nichols, and Ted F. Martens.
Checked by C. F. H. Allen and J. VanAllan.
1. Procedure
This preparation must be carried through the ring closure without interruption.
The apparatus is arranged as in
f.htmig. 7. In a
bottle of about 1.5-l. capacity are placed
64.5 g. (0.5 mole) of di-n-butylamine,
1 350 ml. of ligroin (Note
1), and
350 ml. of 3 N sodium hydroxide (Note
2). The bottle is fitted with an
inlet tube which passes only 1 in. through the stopper. The mixture is cooled in an
ice bath (Note
3), and
chlorine from a cylinder is passed in under pressure (Note
4). The bottle is kept in the ice bath and is shaken during the addition to aid in absorption of the gas. The rate of shaking and the valve on the
chlorine cylinder are so regulated that the pressure as indicated on the manometer is maintained between 100 and 150 mm. (Note
5). The addition of the
chlorine is continued until the white fumes of the hydrochloride, which form when
chlorine comes in contact with the amine vapor, disappear, and the non-aqueous layer takes on a greenish yellow color, due to a slight excess of
chlorine. This indicates that chlorination is complete (Note
6).
Fig. 7.
The ligroin solution of the
chloramine is separated from the aqueous layer in a
chilled, short-stemmed 1-l. separatory funnel and washed successively with
50 ml. of ice-cold 3 N sodium hydroxide (Note
7), 50 ml. of ice water, and
50 ml. of cold 2 N sulfuric acid. The ligroin solution becomes nearly colorless. The
chloramine is extracted from the solution with
sulfuric acid in the following manner. An ice-cold mixture of
200 ml. of concentrated sulfuric acid (sp. gr. 1.84) and 80 ml. of water is allowed to stand in contact with the ligroin solution for 10 minutes
without shaking, then for 20 minutes
with occasional shaking; the mixture is kept cool by immersion in an ice bath. After separation from the acid layer, the
ligroin is extracted with two
60-ml. portions of cold concentrated sulfuric acid. The combined
sulfuric acid extracts are used for ring closure (Note
8). The
ligroin, which contains not more than a trace of
chloramine, is discarded.
A
1-l. wide-mouthed Erlenmeyer flask, fitted with a propeller-type stirrer and a thermometer, is set in an
oil bath. A mixture of
40 ml. of concentrated sulfuric acid and 10 ml. of water is placed in the flask, the oil bath is heated to 120°, and the cold
sulfuric acid solution of the
chloramine is allowed to flow into the heated acid from the short-stemmed separatory funnel (Note
9). The addition, which requires 30–40 minutes (Note
10), is carried out at such a rate that the temperature of the reaction mixture in the flask is dropped from 120° rapidly to 95° by the addition of the cold
chloramine solution, and thereafter at such a rate that the temperature of the reaction mixture remains at 90–100°, preferably at 95°. The reaction is exothermic, and the rise in temperature is controlled by the addition of the cold
chloramine solution. To avoid an undue rise in temperature after the last addition of the
chloramine, the
oil bath is removed, and the flask and contents are allowed to come to room temperature.
A
5-l. flask is fitted with a separatory funnel and arranged for steam distillation
(p. 64). Two liters of crushed ice is placed in the flask, and the
sulfuric acid solution, cooled to 0°, is slowly added. The amines are then liberated (Note
11) by adding cold concentrated
sodium hydroxide solution (650 g. in 1.5 l. of water) through the
separatory funnel. The amines are steam-distilled and collected in a solution of
100 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid (sp. gr. 1.19) and 200 ml. of water (Note
12). Distillation is continued until all amine has passed over, as indicated by a negative test with litmus paper. About 2 l. of distillate is usually required.
The amine hydrochloride solution is evaporated nearly to dryness on a
steam bath (Note
13) and transferred with about 300 ml. of water to a
1-l. three-necked flask equipped with a stirrer,
2 separatory funnel, and condenser. The stirrer is started, and the acid solution is cooled to 0° by immersing the flask in an ice bath. The amines are liberated by adding slowly
100 g. of sodium hydroxide dissolved in 250 ml. of water.
Hinsberg separation. To this solution, which should be cold (5–8°), is now added
23 g. of benzenesulfonyl chloride,
3 and the mixture is stirred vigorously for 30 minutes. The separatory funnel is replaced by a
stopper bearing a thermometer, and the contents of the flask are warmed to 40° and stirred until the odor of the acid chloride is no longer noticeable. This usually requires about 30 minutes. The
1-n-butylpyrrolidine is separated (Note
14) from the non-volatile
di-n-butylbenzenesulfonamide by steam distillation, the amine being collected in dilute acid (Note
12) as before. The acid solution is then evaporated to dryness, and the amine is liberated by adding
20% sodium hydroxide solution until the aqueous layer turns red litmus blue. The amine is extracted by one 200-ml. portion of
ether, and the ethereal solution is dried over
15–20 pellets of potassium hydroxide. After the
ether has been distilled from the decanted solution, the residue is distilled from an oil bath. The yield of
1-n-butylpyrrolidine boiling at
154–155°/758 mm. is
44–51 g. (
70–80%);
nD27 1.437 (Note
15).
2. Notes
1. Any fraction boiling within the range 60–90° may be used.
2. This is obtained by dissolving
42 g. of sodium hydroxide in 350 ml. of water.
3. All equipment, the solutions, and the
chloramine solution should be kept ice-cold to prevent decomposition during the preparation. Apparatus may be stored in a refrigerator.
4. As the addition of
chlorine is started, the stopper in the reaction bottle is loosened momentarily and the
chlorine is allowed to replace most of the air in the system.
5. As the
chlorine passes initially into the bottle, the pressure rises rapidly. Shaking greatly increases the rate of absorption, and the pressure drops. The
chlorine valve is then regulated so as to maintain the proper pressure with shaking. One hundred millimeters was selected as the approximate pressure, since the rate of chlorination under this pressure is satisfactory.
6. A large excess of
chlorine is undesirable and may result in greatly decreased yields. The time required varies widely, being dependent upon the
chlorine pressure maintained and the vigor of the shaking. The checkers found that 20 minutes was ample under their conditions; the submitters reported that 1–1.5 hours was required.
7. If the green color, due to excess
chlorine, is not removed by one washing, the operation is repeated as many times as may be necessary.
8. The
sulfuric acid layers are transferred directly into the
500-ml. short-stemmed separatory funnel to be used in the next step. The solution, which usually has a light brown color, should be cold and well mixed before the ring-closure operation. The ratio of acid to water is important, and only the amounts specified should be used.
9. The funnel and contents may be supported over the reaction flask during the addition without cooling.
10. The rate of addition should be as rapid as possible provided that the proper temperature is maintained. Deviation of more than 5° from the optimum reaction temperature of 95° results in reduced yields.
11. This reaction is vigorous, and the solution of alkali should be added slowly while the flask is shaken gently with a rotary motion.
12. An adapter (rubber connector and glass tube) from the lower end of the condenser should extend below the surface of the absorbing acid in the receiver. To reduce fuming, a 3- to 4-mm. layer of
ligroin is placed over the acid solution. The acid solution may be stirred occasionally.
13. Use of reduced pressure considerably diminishes the time required.
14. The amine can be separated from the sulfonamide by extracting both with
ether, drying this extract over solid
potassium hydroxide, and fractionating. The pyrrolidine distils smoothly, but the yield is slightly lower.
15. Several other pyrrolidines of this series can be prepared by the same general method. The temperature required for ring closure and the percentage yield of
pyrrolidine vary with the different amines used. The tabulated temperatures are given as approximately correct for the ring closure of the N-chloro-derivatives of the amines listed. With lower-boiling pyrrolidines, incomplete separation from the
ether may result in lower yields.
3. Discussion
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