To
3 l. (approximately 45 moles) of concentrated ammonium hydroxide (sp. gr. 0.9) (Note
1) in a
5-l. round-bottomed flask is added, with shaking, a solution of
95 g. (1 mole) of chloroacetic acid (Note
2) in 100 cc. of water. The flask is stoppered and allowed to stand for four days (Note
3). It is then attached to a
condenser for distillation, and the solution is concentrated to 600–700 cc. The excess
ammonia is recovered during this process by connecting the lower end of the condenser to a wide tube leading to the bottom of a
3-l. bottle containing 1.5 l. of distilled water and connecting this in the same way with a smaller bottle containing a little water. The bottles are cooled by running water. About
2 l. of 20–23 per cent ammonium hydroxide is recovered in the first receiver (Note
1).
The residual solution is then transferred to a
2-l. beaker, a solution of
50 g. (1.25 moles) of sodium hydroxide in 100 cc. of water and a little
decolorizing carbon are added, and the mixture is boiled until the odor of
ammonia is completely absent (Note
4). The solution is filtered by suction, diluted to 500 cc. with water, and transferred to a
2-l. round-bottomed flask equipped with a
mechanical stirrer and cooled by running water. While stirring and cooling below 30°,
150 g. (1.1 moles) of benzoyl chloride (Note
2) and a cold solution of
80 g. (2 moles) of sodium hydroxide in 200 cc. of water are admitted separately from separatory funnels at such rates that the solution is always only slightly alkaline. About an hour is required for adding the reagents, and the mixture is stirred for a half hour longer. It is then poured into
125 cc. of concentrated hydrochloric acid in a 2-l. beaker, and, after cooling, the precipitate is filtered and dried. The weight at this point is
150–160 g. The solid is placed in a beaker with
300 cc. of technical carbon tetrachloride, the beaker is covered with a
watch glass, and the mixture is boiled gently for ten minutes. The mixture is then cooled slightly, filtered by gentle suction, and the
hippuric acid washed on the filter with
50 cc. of carbon tetrachloride (Note
5). After drying, it weighs
135–140 g. For final purification the acid is dissolved in about 2 l. of boiling water, filtered through a
steam-heated funnel and allowed to crystallize without artificial cooling. It then appears in characteristic white needles melting at
186–187°. The yield is
115–122 g. (
64–68 per cent of the theoretical amount based on the
chloroacetic acid used). Upon concentrating the mother liquor to 200 cc., a further 6–7 g. of slightly brown
hippuric acid is obtained.