In a
1-gallon (4-l.) bottle are placed
1050 g. (1305 cc., 21.7 moles) of 95 per cent ethyl alcohol and
200 g. (1.8 moles) of granulated anhydrous calcium chloride (Note
1). The mixture is cooled to 8° or below by immersion in ice water, and
500 g. (620 cc., 11.4 moles) of freshly distilled acetaldehyde (b. p.
20–22°) is slowly added down the sides of the bottle so that it forms a layer on the alcoholic
calcium chloride. The bottle is then tightly closed with a
cork stopper and shaken vigorously for a few minutes (Note
2). It is then allowed to stand at room temperature with intermittent shaking for one to two days. The mixture divides into two layers after one to two hours; after the first twenty-four hours no appreciable change in volume of the two layers takes place.
The upper layer, which weighs 1280–1285 g., is separated and washed three times with 330 cc. portions of water. The weight has now fallen to 990–995 g. The oil is dried by standing over
25 g. of anhydrous potassium carbonate and is then fractionally distilled with the use of an
efficient column at least 90 cm. long (Note
3), and the fraction which boils at
101–103.5° collected as pure
acetal. In this way
700–720 g. can be obtained by one or two fractionations. The yield can be further increased by washing the low-boiling fractions and residue with small quantities of water, drying, and again fractionally distilling, so that a total of
790–815 g. is obtained (
61–64 per cent of the theoretical amount). (Note
4)