Submitted by G. Schiemann and W. Winkelmüller.
Checked by W. W. Hartman, J. R. Byers, and J. B. Dickey.
1. Procedure
A mixture of
280 g. (1.5 moles) of commercial benzidine and
880 cc. (10.2 moles) of concentrated hydrochloric acid (sp. gr. 1.18) is placed in a
5-l. round-bottomed flask and warmed on a
steam bath for one to two hours, with occasional shaking, to form the dihydrochloride. The flask is then equipped with a
mechanical stirrer and a
dropping funnel, and cooled, with stirring, to −10° in an
ice-salt bath. When this temperature has been reached, the
benzidine dihydrochloride is tetrazotized over a period of two hours with a solution of
232 g. (3.2 moles) of 95 per cent sodium nitrite in 800 cc. of water, until a faint test for
nitrous acid with starch-iodide paper is obtained after twenty minutes. During this reaction, the temperature is kept below −5°.
Concurrently with the tetrazotization,
104 g. (1.68 moles) of boric acid is dissolved in
222 g. (6.66 moles) of 60 per cent hydrofluoric acid. The solution is made in a
1-l. beaker, which has been coated inside with paraffin, and is cooled in an
ice bath. The
boric acid is added slowly in small portions, and the mixture is stirred with a
lead rod. It is necessary to keep the temperature below 20–25° in order that the heat of solution may not melt the paraffin from the walls of the beaker (Note
1).
The ice-cold
fluoboric acid solution is added rather rapidly, with stirring, to the finished tetrazo solution, the temperature being kept below 10°. A thick paste of
4,4'-biphenylene-bis-diazonium borofluoride forms. The mixture is stirred at 10° for twenty to thirty minutes. It is then collected on a
19-cm. Büchner funnel and washed consecutively with about 200 cc. of cold water,
200 cc. of cold commercial methyl alcohol, and
200 cc. of commercial ether; the cake is sucked as dry as possible between washings. It is then dried in a
vacuum desiccator over concentrated
sulfuric acid (sp. gr. 1.84). The yield of the dry solid is
393–400 g. (
68–69 per cent of the theoretical amount). The product decomposes at 135–137°.
A
1-l. distilling flask with a wide side arm may be used for the decomposition of the
tetrazonium borofluoride. A
500-cc. distilling flask is fastened directly to the side arm of the decomposition flask and cooled with running water. To the side arm of the
receiver is connected a
rubber tube which is placed over 2 l. of water in a
5-l. flask (Note
2). The solid to be decomposed (Note
3) is placed in the decomposition flask and heated at the upper edge with a
Bunsen burner. When white fumes begin to be evolved, the burner is removed and the decomposition permitted to continue spontaneously. More heat is applied as needed. Finally vigorous heating is employed to ensure complete decomposition. Some
4,4'-difluorobiphenyl is collected in the receiver, but the larger portion remains in the decomposition flask, from which it is recovered by steam-distilling the black residue. A second steam distillation gives a pure white compound melting at
88–89°, after drying in an
oven at 60–70°. When
153 g. of the tetrazonium borofluoride is decomposed in this manner,
61–62 g. of
4,4'-difluorobiphenyl is obtained (
80–81.5 per cent of the theoretical amount, based on the
tetrazonium borofluoride;
54–56 per cent based on the
benzidine used).
2. Notes
1. A
small lead jar is excellent for preparing the solution. By means of a
lead stirrer of the usual shape, mechanical stirring may be used. The stirrer should be thrust through a hole in a lead cover of sufficient size to prevent splashing of the
hydrofluoric acid.
Hydrofluoric acid produces extremely painful burns. Exposed parts of the body must be protected when working with this material. Compare,
Note 3, p. 297. Instead of preparing
fluoboric acid,
355.5 g. of commercial 40 per cent fluoboric acid may be used.
2. A convenient apparatus is made by connecting a
1-l. round-bottomed flask by means of a
bent tube of large diameter (2 cm.) to a second 1-l. round-bottomed flask containing 500 cc. of water. The second flask is equipped with an exit tube, and the gases which do not dissolve in the water are led into a
hood.
3. It is very necessary that the
tetrazonium borofluoride be dried completely. If the solid is wet, the decomposition proceeds very vigorously. There is formed at the same time a product of higher melting point (
160°) as well as some tar. These products, although not volatile with steam, lower the yield of the
4,4'-difluorobiphenyl very materially.
3. Discussion
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