Submitted by C. S. Marvel and G. S. Hiers.
Checked by J. B. Conant
1. Procedure
(
A)
Isonitrosoacetanilide.—In a
5-l. round-bottomed flask are placed
90 g. (0.54 mole) of chloral hydrate and 1200 cc. of water. To this solution are then added, in order:
1300 g. of crystallized sodium sulfate (Note
1); a solution of
46.5 g. (0.5 mole) of aniline (Note
2) in 300 cc. of water to which
51.2 g. (43 cc., 0.52 mole) of concentrated hydrochloric acid (sp. gr. 1.19) has been added to dissolve the amine (Note
3); and, finally, a solution of
110 g. (1.58 moles) of hydroxylamine hydrochloride (Note
4) in 500 cc. of water. The flask is heated over a
wire gauze by a Meker burner so that vigorous boiling begins in about forty to forty-five minutes. After one to two minutes (Note
5) of vigorous boiling the reaction is complete. During the heating period, some crystals of
isonitrosoacetanilide separate. On cooling the solution in running water the remainder crystallizes, is filtered with suction, and air-dried. The yield is
65–75 g. (
80–91 per cent of the theoretical amount) of a product melting at
175°.
(
B)
Isatin.—
Six hundred grams (326 cc.) of concentrated sulfuric acid (sp. gr. 1.84) is warmed to 50° in a
1-l. round-bottomed flask fitted with an
efficient mechanical stirrer, and, to this,
75 g. (0.46 mole) of dry (Note 6) isonitrosoacetanilide is added at such a rate as to keep the temperature between 60° and 70° but not higher (Note
7). External cooling should be applied at this stage so that the reaction can be carried out more rapidly. After the addition of the
isonitroso compound is finished, the solution is heated to 80° and kept at this temperature for about ten minutes to complete the reaction. Then the reaction mixture is cooled to room temperature and poured upon ten to twelve times its volume of cracked ice. After standing for about one-half hour, the
isatin is filtered with suction, washed several times with cold water to remove the
sulfuric acid, and then dried in the air. The yield of crude
isatin, which melts at
189–192°, is
47–52 g. (
71–78 per cent of the theoretical amount). This product is pure enough for many purposes (Note
8).
For purification,
200 g. of the crude product is suspended in 1 l. of hot water and treated with a solution of
88 g. of sodium hydroxide in 200 cc. of water. The solution is stirred mechanically and the
isatin passes into solution. Dilute
hydrochloric acid is then added, with stirring, until a slight precipitate appears. This requires about
290–300 cc. of an acid made by diluting one volume of concentrated hydrochloric acid (sp. gr. 1.19) with two volumes of water (Note
9). The mixture is then filtered at once, the precipitate is rejected, and the filtrate is made acid to Congo red paper with
hydrochloric acid. The solution is then cooled rapidly, and the
isatin which separates is filtered with suction and dried in the air. The pure product thus obtained weighs
150–170 g. (Note
10) and (Note
11) and melts at
197–200° (corr.).
Isatin may also be crystallized from three times its weight of glacial
acetic acid. In this case it is obtained in large brown-red crystals which melt at
196–197°.
2. Notes
1. Several runs were made in which the amounts of water and
sodium sulfate were varied over a considerable range, and this concentration was found to give the best yield of product of good quality. The
sodium sulfate seems to have more than a salting-out effect. If a saturated solution of
sodium chloride is used no product is obtained.
2. Redistilled
aniline boiling over a 2° range was used in these experiments. The ordinary "pure" grade gives slightly lower yields.
3. If the
aniline is not in solution, a considerable quantity of tarry material is formed during the heating period. No tar is formed when the method described is used.
5. Longer heating of the reaction mixture gives a lower yield of dark-colored product.
7. The reaction does not start below 45–50° but becomes too violent above 75–80°. If the temperature becomes too high, the entire run is lost by charring. Stirring is needed to prevent local overheating.
8. In some smaller preparations when the
sulfuric acid solution was poured on ice a yellow compound precipitated, which was shown to be the oxime of isatin. It has also been isolated from the acid mother liquors from which the
isatin has separated. The oxime probably owes its formation to the hydrolysis of some unaltered
isonitrosoacetanilide (J. P. Wibaut,
1 private communication).
9. The correct amount of acid that must be added to precipitate the impurities but not the
isatin will vary with different samples of crude
isatin. If too much acid is added, some
isatin comes down with the impurities. This may be saved and added to a subsequent run.
10. The yield of
isatin is lower than for some of its derivatives. The explanation given in the literature is that some sulfonation occurs during the treatment with
sulfuric acid, with corresponding loss of product.
11. This method can be applied successfully to other
isatin derivatives. Thus, under the same conditions,
54 g. of p-toluidine gives
75–77 g. (
83–86 per cent of the theoretical amount) of
isonitrosoaceto-p-toluidine melting at
162°.
Eighty grams of this isonitroso compound treated as described under
isonitrosoacetanilide gives
65–68 g. (
90–94 per cent of the theoretical amount) of crude
5-methyl isatin melting at
179–183°. This is purified as described under
isatin by solution in
sodium hydroxide and partial neutralization to throw out the impurities or by recrystallization from three parts of glacial
acetic acid. The purified
5-methyl isatin melts at
187°.
3. Discussion
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