In a
250-cc. round-bottomed flask, fitted with a
reflux condenser to which is attached a
calcium chloride tube,
28 g. (0.21 mole) of freshly fused and finely powdered zinc chloride (Note
1) is dissolved in
38 cc. of glacial acetic acid by heating in an
oil bath at 135–140°.
Forty grams (0.37 mole) of 95 per cent acetic anhydride is then added to the clear, pale brown liquid, followed by the addition in one lot of
50 g. (0.4 mole) of distilled pyrogallol (Note
2). The mixture is heated at 140–145° (Note
3) for forty-five minutes with frequent and vigorous shaking. The unused
acetic anhydride and
acetic acid are removed by distilling under reduced pressure. The red-brown cake is broken up by the addition of 300 cc. of water with mechanical stirring for a few minutes. The mixture is cooled in ice water, filtered with suction, and washed with cold water. The crude material, 45–50 g., is crystallized from 500 cc. of boiling water saturated with
sulfur dioxide. The yield of straw-colored needles melting at
171–172° is
36–38 g. (
54–57 per cent of the theoretical amount). On saturating the mother liquor with salt and cooling to 10°,
4–5 g. of crude material is obtained, which on recrystallization yields
3–4 g. of pure material (Note
4).