Expt 3 Benzopinacol Prep
Expt 3 Benzopinacol Prep
Expt 3 Benzopinacol Prep
Reactions:
Synthesis of Benzopinacol
Ph
OH
HO Ph
Ph
Ph
Ph
Ph OH
Benzophenone
2-Propanol
Benzopinacol
Acetone
Note: Ph = phenyl
Synthesis of Benzopinacolone
Ph Ph
Ph OH
CH3CO2H
Ph
Ph
Ph
Ph
HO Ph
Benzopinacol
Benzopinacolone
Physical Properties
Substance
Structure
Molecular
Formula
MW
(g/mol)
MP (C)
Benzophenone
2-Propanol
Acetone
Iodine
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
Benzopinacolone
Ethanol
Density
(g/mL)
N/A
Benzopinacol
Acetic Acid
(glacial)
BP
(C)
N/A
N/A
Diagrams:
Experimental Procedure: This section should be written in the style used by the Journal of
Organic Chemistry. It will assume that readers of your report are familiar with organic reaction
techniques and therefore a certain level of understanding is expected. In the journal article
format, they also include details of the product characterization. In your case, you will have
yields, appearances, melting points and IR data to include.
compounds, you will have two separate procedures. Click on the pdf link on the course website
to a journal article you should use as an example. Look at the Experimental Procedures section
of this article for the examples.
Here is a rough outline of what to include:
Name of compound. State what was put in the reaction flask and include what type of flask was
used. Include grams and mmol or mL as shown in the examples. State the time and temperature
conditions. Include any specific procedural instructions. State how the reaction was treated after
it finished reacting. State how the compound was purified. Provide a description of product
appearance, yield, percent yield.
Give IR data.
Moles of 2-Propanol:
mL of 2-propanol x density of 2-propanol x 1/MW of 2-propanol
Acetic acid:
Catalyst (This will not be the limiting reagent).
Limiting Reagent:
Theoretical Yield:
Moles of LR x MW of product (benzopinacol) x 1 mole Benzolpinacol
2 moles Benzophenone
Actual Yield
Theoretical Yield
x 100%
Moles of Benzopinacol: Based on grams of benzopinacol YOU have for this reaction
grams of Benzopinacol x 1/MW of Benzopinacol
mL of acetic acid (Calculate in lab after you know the yield of Benzopinacol)
You need to use enough acetic acid to make a 0.5 M solution of Benzopinacol in acetic acid.
mL of acetic acid =
moles of benzopinacol
0.5M
??? liters
0.5M
1000 mL
1 liter
??? liters
1000 mL
1 liter
??? mL
moles of acetic acid (Calculate in lab after you know the yield of Benzopinacol):
mL of acetic acid x density of acetic acid x 1/MW of acetic acid
1 mole
??? mL acetic acid
1.049 g/mL
Iodine:
Catalyst (This will not be the limiting reagent).
Limiting Reagent:
Theoretical Yield:
Moles of LR x MW of product (benzopinacolone)
Actual Yield
Theoretical Yield
x 100%
Benzopinacol to benzopinacolone:
Data:
1. Appearances for Benzopinacol and Benzopinacolone
2. Melting points for Benzopinacol and Benzopinacolone
3. Mass of Benzopinacolone
4. Labeled IR spectra provided for Benzopinacol and Benzopinacolone
Conclusion: (approximately 3 paragraphs)
State and discuss yields and melting points for benzopinacol and benzopinacolone. Were
your melting points close to literature values?
Comment on the IR data and use it to justify success of your reactions. Did you observe key
changes that let you know the reactions worked?
Explain how the success of these reactions might be improved in the future.
References: Cite the lab manual, physical property references, sources for the introduction and
conclusion. For journal article references or books, please use ACS format. Here is an example:
ACS Format:
Journal Articles:
Stermitz, Frank R.; Cashman, Kevin K.; Halligan, Kathleen M.; Morel, Cecile; Tegos,
George P.; Lewis, Kim. Polyacylated neohesperidosides From Geranium caespitosum:
bacterial multidrug resistance pump inhibitors.