Checked by R. S. Schreiber, A. C. Ott, and M. F. Murray.
1. Procedure
Caution! This preparation should be carried out in a good hood, and it is advisable to use rubber gloves.
In a
5-l. flask surmounted by a
water-cooled still head connected to a 30-in. spiral condenser set for downward distillation and connected to a
well-cooled receiver (Note
1),
564 g. (4 moles) of β-aminoethylsulfuric acid (Note
2) is mixed with
1760 g. (1230 ml.) of 40% sodium hydroxide solution (704 g. of sodium hydroxide in 1056 ml. of water). The mixture is heated with a free flame until it just begins to boil. At this point external heating is discontinued (Note
3). The reaction that begins at the boiling point keeps the mixture boiling for several minutes. When this initial reaction has subsided, heating is resumed and about 500 ml. of distillate is collected as quickly as possible in the well-cooled receiver. To the chilled distillate
450–500 g. of potassium hydroxide pellets is added gradually, whereupon the imine separates as an upper layer. The organic layers from four such 4-mole runs are combined and left overnight in a
refrigerator over about
400 g. of potassium hydroxide pellets. The aqueous layers are combined and distilled through a
wrapped 10-in. Vigreux column attached to a 30-in. spiral condenser. The distillate boiling at 50–100° is chilled thoroughly, and
200–250 g. of potassium hydroxide pellets is added gradually. The upper layer of crude
ethylenimine is separated and combined with the larger portion of base (Note
4) and (Note
5).
If an aqueous layer appears during drying of the combined organic layers, the upper layer (about 575–600 g.) is again separated,
200 g. of potassium hydroxide pellets is added, and the whole is distilled through the same apparatus as that used for distilling the aqueous portion. If no layer appears, the base is decanted from the hydroxide and distilled from a fresh
200-g. portion of potassium hydroxide. The fraction boiling at 50–100° (about 350 g.) is collected and dried over
100 g. of potassium hydroxide pellets.
The yield of
ethylenimine (b.p.
56–58°) is
235–250 g. (
34–37%). A stick of
sodium hydroxide is added to act as a preservative, and the material is best stored in
sealed bottles in a refrigerator (Note
7), (Note
8), and (Note
9).
2. Notes
1. Cooling the receiver in a freezing mixture will cut the loss of the distillate to a minimum.
3. It is well to have an
ice bath available to control the exothermic reaction, which may become quite violent.
4. The use of an
efficient distilling column is recommended because the crude base contains higher-boiling by-products. One of these is the dimer,
N-β-aminoethylethylenimine; b.p.
126–127.5°.
5. It has been suggested that the portion of
ethylenimine, boiling at
50–100°, might be collected directly on distillation without separating the organic layer from the aqueous
potassium hydroxide layer. This is not advisable, because heating
ethylenimine in the presence of a base appears to increase polymerization. The quantity of the organic base contained in the concentrated aqueous solution of
potassium hydroxide is sufficient, however, to warrant this distillation of the aqueous layer.
6. If the original separation is done carefully and if sufficient
potassium hydroxide is used, an aqueous layer will separate during the first drying only. Should this not be the case, it may be worth while to combine all aqueous portions obtained and redistil them to obtain any material boiling at 50–100°.
8.
Ethylenimine is strongly caustic and burns the skin. Inhalation of the vapor causes acute inflammation of the eyes, nose, and throat, with symptoms resembling those of bronchitis. After two or three days, the irritation subsides and the tissues return to normal, without suffering any apparent permanent injury. Continued exposure to the vapor may cause an individual to acquire an extreme sensitivity to it.
Ethylenimine is also very inflammable and polymerizes with explosive violence under certain conditions.
4,5
9. Redistillation over fresh
potassium hydroxide of the residue from this final distillation gives an additional
10–15 g. of
ethylenimine, boiling at
56–58°. This redistillation is advisable when the residues from three to four 16-mole batches are combined.
3. Discussion
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