Organic Syntheses, CV 5, 937
Submitted by Gerard J. Mikol and Glen A. Russell
1.
Checked by William G. Dauben, Michael H. McGann, and Noel Vietmeyer.
1. Procedure
A.
Phenylglyoxal hemimercaptal. In a
1-l. three-necked flask equipped with an
all-glass mechanical stirrer, a
125-ml. dropping funnel, and a
condenser fitted with a
nitrogen-inlet tube are placed
90 ml. (99 g., 1.27 moles) of dry dimethyl sulfoxide (Note
1),
120 ml. of dry t-butyl alchohol (Note
1), and
57.4 g. (0.51 mole) of potassium t-butoxide (Note
2) and (Note
3). The mixture is warmed to 80°; when all the solid has dissolved, the heating is discontinued, and
72 ml. (75 g., 0.50 mole) of dry ethyl benzoate (Note
1) is added slowly from the dropping funnel. The reaction mixture is stirred at room temperature for 4 hours, and the solvent is removed at 80–90° under reduced pressure until the volume of the reaction mixture has been reduced to 150 ml. (Note
4). The residue is poured into 500 ml. of an ice-water slurry. The resulting aqueous solution is extracted with three
100-ml. portions of ether, and the ethereal extracts are discarded (Note
5). The aqueous solution is acidified with a solution of
190 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid in 675 ml. of water, and the mixture is allowed to stand at room temperature for 30 hours. The pale yellow precipitate is removed by suction filtration, washed with 500 ml. of cold water, and air-dried to yield
69–74 g. (
76–81%) of
phenylglyoxal hemimercaptal, m.p.
103–105°.
B.
Phenylglyoxal. The
phenylglyoxal hemimercaptal prepared as described in procedure A (69–74 g.) is dissolved in
400 ml. of warm chloroform, and
60 g. (0.30 mole) of powdered cupric acetate monohydrate is added in one portion to the well-stirred solution. The mixture is stirred at room temperature for 1 hour; the solids are removed by suction filtration and washed with two
75-ml. portions of chloroform. The combined
chloroform filtrate and washings are shaken in a
separatory funnel with 75 ml. of water;
20 g. of powdered sodium carbonate is added in small portions to the funnel, and the
chloroform solution is shaken with the neutralized aqueous solution.
(Caution! Carbon dioxide is evolved.) The aqueous layer is separated and extracted with four
30-ml. portion of chloroform. The
chloroform solutions are combined and dried with anhydrous
magnesium sulfate, and the
chloroform is removed under reduced pressure. The residue is fractionally distilled under reduced pressure to yield
43–49 g. (
64–73%, based on
ethyl benzoate) of anhydrous
phenylglyoxal as a yellow liquid, b.p.
63–65° (0.5 mm.).
2. Notes
3. The
potassium salt of dimethyl sulfoxide can also be prepared in the following manner. In a 1-l. three-necked flask equipped with an all-glass mechanical stirrer, a 125-ml. dropping funnel containing
90 ml. of dry dimethyl sulfoxide (Note
1), and a Claisen distillation head and condenser is placed
425 ml. of dry t-butyl alcohol (Note
1). The system is flushed with dry
nitrogen, and
20 g. (0.51 g. atom) of potassium is added (Note
6). The system is closed to the atmosphere by a mineral oil bubbler through which the evolved
hydrogen escapes. The mixture is stirred at 80° until the
potassium has dissolved. After cooling, the unreacted alcohol is removed by distillation under reduced pressure until a thick slurry of
potassium t-butoxide remains (Note
7). The
dimethyl sulfoxide is added from the dropping funnel, and the mixture is heated to 80–90° to dissolve all the solid. The solution is maintained at this temperature, and additional
t-butyl alcohol is removed under reduced pressure until the volume of the solution is reduced to 300 ml.
4. Since the volume of the solution at this point is critical, the reaction flask should be calibrated.
5. The aqueous solution can be used to prepare
2-(methylsulfinyl)acetophenone by the following procedure. The solution is acidified to pH 1–2 (Hydrion paper) by the slow addition of concentrated
hydrochloric acid with vigorous stirring and is extracted immediately with two
100-ml. portions of chloroform. The
chloroform extracts are combined, washed with
75 ml. of saturated aqueous sodium carbonate and two 75-ml. portions of water, and dried over anhydrous
magnesium sulfate. The
chloroform is removed under reduced pressure, and the resulting solid is pulverized, slurried with
100 ml. of ether, collected by filtration, and air-dried. The
2-(methylsulfinyl)acetophenone weighs
75–77 g. (
82–85%); m.p.
85–86°. It can be converted to
phenylglyoxal hemimercaptal by treatment with dilute
hydrochloric acid in
dimethyl sulfoxide solution at room temperature (
2 ml. of dimethyl sulfoxide,
2 ml. of concentrated hydrochloric acid, and 15 ml. of water per gram of the keto sulfoxide). The solution is allowed to stand at room temperature for 30 hours, after which the
phenylglyoxal hemimercaptal can be isolated as described in procedure A.
7. A heating mantle may be used, but care must be taken to avoid decomposition on the walls of the flask due to overheating during the later stages of the distillation.
3. Discussion
4. Merits of the Preparation
This procedure provides a convenient synthesis of
phenylglyoxal from readily available starting materials. In addition the method described appears to have general utility for the synthesis of glyoxals. It has been used for the synthesis of
p-tolylglyoxal,
p-methoxyphenylglyoxal,
p-bromophenylglyoxal, and
cyclohexylglyoxal. Since β-keto sulfoxides are readily alkylated in basic solution to yield α-alkyl β-keto sulfoxides,
12 it would appear possible to extend the scope of the reaction to yield a variety of α-diketones.
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