To
3600 g. (1960 cc.) of concentrated sulfuric acid, in a
5-l. flask placed in an empty
water bath, is added
360 g. (1.6 moles) of technical trinitrotoluene, while the mixture is stirred mechanically (Note
1).
Sodium dichromate is now added in small quantities (Note
2), with constant stirring, until the temperature of the mixture reaches 40°; the empty water bath is now filled with cold water and the addition of
sodium dichromate continued at such a rate that the temperature remains at 45–55°. In all,
540 g. (1.8 moles) of sodium dichromate is added, the addition taking one to two hours. When all has been added, the mixture, which has now become very thick, is stirred for two hours at 45–55°, and poured into a
crock containing 4 kg. of crushed ice. The insoluble
trinitrobenzoic acid is filtered off and carefully washed with cold water until free from chromium salts. On drying it weighs
320–340 g.
The product is now mixed with 2 l. of distilled water at 35° in a 5-l. flask provided with a
stirrer, and
15 per cent sodium hydroxide solution is dropped in with continuous stirring until a
faint red color is just produced (Note
3). Should this disappear, it is restored by the addition of a few drops more. When it has persisted for five minutes, the color is discharged by the addition of a few drops of
acetic acid, and the insoluble unattacked
trinitrotoluene filtered off and washed with a little water. The
trinitrobenzoic acid is precipitated from the filtrate by the addition of a slight excess of
50 per cent sulfuric acid. The solution is chilled, and the acid filtered and washed free from salts with ice water (Note
4). When dried in air it weighs
230–280 g. (
57–69 per cent of the theoretical amount).